harrytwatter
just be nice ffs
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2017
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I've seen the "should I index them? nofollow them?" question posed a lot regarding Wordpress category pages. Personally I've done both in the past and never really saw a big advantage or disadvantage because they've always just been a collection of links to individual posts so I by and large have just ignored them.
Recently though given the amount of clicks running through those category pages via my primary nav (menu is largely just organized post categories) and was thinking, geez, couldn't I squeeze some money out of those?
So I've been thinking of turning my category pages into general overview and category specific "directory" style resource pages. For example, if I had a fishing site, and my categories were "rods, reels, boats, gear, trips" then on the "rods" category page include a quick summary of the different types then a table listing the best brands/stores/suppliers.
I'd repeat that for reels, boats, gear, trips. For shops/brands that have affiliate programs I would use affiliate links but the aim would be to have it 90% altruistic and affiliate link free, like a real directory. Like a real directory, I could also theoretically charge for brand inclusion if someone wanted to be added to a category list.
My logic is, directory-styled (directorized?) content can be a quick way to get people click on links because things are organized and very easy to parse through (as a user, to make a determination) vs. a CTA buried somewhere in 1,700 word text-heavy image heavy post.
I'm not sure if adding dozens of OBLs to these pages will impact anything, or if adding a directory/table that pushes the actual category posts further down the page would be more detrimental than beneficial, but it sure would be sweet to pump up my affiliate offer links while simultaneously offering users a bunch of juicy quick access information.
Anyone out there crushing it with unique and/or robust category pages? Any words of warning?
Recently though given the amount of clicks running through those category pages via my primary nav (menu is largely just organized post categories) and was thinking, geez, couldn't I squeeze some money out of those?
So I've been thinking of turning my category pages into general overview and category specific "directory" style resource pages. For example, if I had a fishing site, and my categories were "rods, reels, boats, gear, trips" then on the "rods" category page include a quick summary of the different types then a table listing the best brands/stores/suppliers.
I'd repeat that for reels, boats, gear, trips. For shops/brands that have affiliate programs I would use affiliate links but the aim would be to have it 90% altruistic and affiliate link free, like a real directory. Like a real directory, I could also theoretically charge for brand inclusion if someone wanted to be added to a category list.
My logic is, directory-styled (directorized?) content can be a quick way to get people click on links because things are organized and very easy to parse through (as a user, to make a determination) vs. a CTA buried somewhere in 1,700 word text-heavy image heavy post.
I'm not sure if adding dozens of OBLs to these pages will impact anything, or if adding a directory/table that pushes the actual category posts further down the page would be more detrimental than beneficial, but it sure would be sweet to pump up my affiliate offer links while simultaneously offering users a bunch of juicy quick access information.
Anyone out there crushing it with unique and/or robust category pages? Any words of warning?