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Yeniel560

: How does the home page work at the top of a website navigation hierchy? Is that for dropdown menus? This might be a simple question BUT - I'm having a hard time understanding internal navigation,

@Yeniel560

Posted in: #Google #Links #Navigation #Seo

This might be a simple question BUT - I'm having a hard time understanding internal navigation, specifically navbar links which apparently should form a hierarchy, as seen by image below from MOZ



My site navigation looks like this:




I have 3 links at the very top as can be seen on the image
the website name is in the middle with a link
main navbar is at the bottom, no dropdowns


MY QUESTION


I do not understand the hierarchy in image one, how can homepage by
only one link which links down to other pages?
Is having dropdown menus consider beneficial?
I have about 80 pages, I am considering changing my nav structure making dropdowns from wordpress tags to relevant category in the navbar, is this a wise move or will I lose more than I will gain?

4.Is the overall layout of my nav structure considered okay when looking at image 2?


UPDATE:

When doing a branded search for my site google displays 6 links, the 6 links displayed is wrong though, it shows 4 pages (good) and 2 (posts... which is a bit weird?) The 2 posts that is displayed with the pages has very strong backlinks pointing at them though

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@Ravi8258870

To help with question #1 the Moz hierarchy image represents a typical web site layout with one starting home page usually called index.html. From that first page users can go to any of the sub-pages (child pages of index.html). How the navigation looks on the page is up to the site design such as left or right nav, top nav bar, drop down links, buttons, etc.

Knowing how users see the site nav (which relates to hierarchy) and how a search engines views it are important distinctions.

Your website has its own home page and five child pages (rubgy, cricket, etc.) With only that small set of pages I wouldn't change the nav to a drop down list. You're adding more clicks for the users to see the other pages. Navigating your site should be easier not hard. Dropdown lists are usually used when there is a lot of material, too much to show at once.

You mentioned the navigation is at the bottom of the page. That layout is again asking the user to do more work. They land on your site for first time and only see the top 5 pages (link in top nav). Why would they know to go to the bottom of the page to see more pages? Usually the bottom area is used as a footer and a larger site map with simple text links to major pages of the site. It generally isn't intended to substitute for well designed top navigation.

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