Websites that utilize databases which can insert
content into a webpage by way of a dynamic script like PHP or JavaScript are
increasingly popular. This type of site is considered dynamic. Many websites
choose dynamic content over static content. This is because if a website has
thousands of products or pages, writing or updating each static by hand is amonumental task.
There are two types of URLs: dynamic and static.
A dynamic URL is a page address that results from the search of a
database-driven web site or the URL of a web site that runs a script. In
contrast to static URLs, in which the contents of the web page stay the same
unless the changes are hard-coded into the HTML, dynamic URLs are generated from
specific queries to a site's database. The dynamic page is basically only a
template in which to display the results of the database query. Instead of
changing information in the HTML code, the data is changed in the database.
But there is a risk when using dynamic URLs:
search engines don't like them. For those at most risk of losing search engine
positioning due to dynamic URLs are e-commerce stores, forums, sites utilizing
content management systems and blogs like Mambo or WordPress, or any other database-driven
website. Many times the URL that is generated for the content in a dynamic site
looks something like this:
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php?threadid=12345&sort=date
A static URL on the other hand, is a URL that doesn't change, and doesn't have variable strings. It looks like this:
http://www.somesites.com/forums/the-challenges-of-dynamic-urls.htm
A static URL on the other hand, is a URL that doesn't change, and doesn't have variable strings. It looks like this:
http://www.somesites.com/forums/the-challenges-of-dynamic-urls.htm
Static URLs are typically ranked better in search
engine results pages, and they are indexed more quickly than dynamic URLs, if dynamic
URLs get indexed at all. Static URLs are also easier for the end-user to view
and understand what the page is about. If a user sees a URL in a search engine
query that matches the title and description, they are more likely to click on
that URL than one that doesn't make sense to them.
A search engine wants to only list pages its
index that are unique. Search engines decide to combat this issue by cutting
off the URLs after a specific number of variable strings (e.g.: ? & =).
For example, let's look at three URLs:
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php?threadid=12345&sort=date
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php?threadid=67890&sort=date
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php?threadid=13579&sort=date
All three of these URLs point to three different pages. But if the search engine purges the information after the first offending character, the question mark (?), now all three pages look the same:
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php
Now, you don't have unique pages, and consequently, the duplicate URLs won't be indexed.
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php?threadid=67890&sort=date
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php?threadid=13579&sort=date
All three of these URLs point to three different pages. But if the search engine purges the information after the first offending character, the question mark (?), now all three pages look the same:
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php
Now, you don't have unique pages, and consequently, the duplicate URLs won't be indexed.
Another issue is that dynamic pages generally do
not have any keywords in the URL. It is very important to have keyword richURLs. Highly relevant keywords should appear in the domain name or the page
URL. This became clear in a recent study on how the top three search engines,
Google, Yahoo, and MSN, rank websites.
The study involved taking hundreds of highly
competitive keyword queries, like travel, cars, and computer software, and
comparing factors involving the top ten results. The statistics show that of
those top ten, Google has 40-50% of those with the keyword either in the URL or
the domain; Yahoo shows 60%; and MSN has an astonishing 85%! What that means is
that to these search engines, having your keywords in your URL or domain name
could mean the difference between a top ten ranking, and a ranking far down in
the results pages.
The Solution
So what can you do about this difficult problem? You certainly don't want to have to go back and recode every single dynamic URL into a static URL. This would be too much work for any website owner.
So what can you do about this difficult problem? You certainly don't want to have to go back and recode every single dynamic URL into a static URL. This would be too much work for any website owner.
If you are hosted on a Linux server, then you
will want to make the most of the Apache Mod Rewrite Rule, which is gives you
the ability to inconspicuously redirect one URL to another, without the user's
(or a search engine's) knowledge. You will need to have this module installed
in Apache; for more information, you can view the
documentation for this module here. This module saves you from having to
rewrite your static URLs manually.
How does this module work? When a request comes
in to a server for the new static URL, the Apache module redirects the URL
internally to the old, dynamic URL, while still looking like the new staticURL. The web server compares the URL requested by the client with the search
pattern in the individual rules.
For example, when someone requests this URL:
http://www.somesites.com/forums/the-challenges-of-dynamic-urls.html
The server looks for and compares this static-looking URL to what information is listed in the .htaccess file, such as:
RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule thread-threadid-(.*)\.htm$ thread.php?threadid=$1
It then converts the static URL to the old dynamic URL that looks like this, with no one the wiser:
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php?threadid=12345
http://www.somesites.com/forums/the-challenges-of-dynamic-urls.html
The server looks for and compares this static-looking URL to what information is listed in the .htaccess file, such as:
RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule thread-threadid-(.*)\.htm$ thread.php?threadid=$1
It then converts the static URL to the old dynamic URL that looks like this, with no one the wiser:
http://www.somesites.com/forums/thread.php?threadid=12345
You now have a URL that only will rank better in
the search engines, but your end-users can definitely understand by glancing at
the URL what the page will be about, while allowing Apache's Mod Rewrite Rule
to handle to conversion for you, and still keeping the dynamic URL.
If you are not particularly technical, you may
not wish to attempt to figure out the complex Mod Rewrite code and how to use
it, or you simply may not have the time to embark upon a new learning curve.
Therefore, it would be extremely beneficial to have something to do it for you.
This URL
Rewriting Tool can definitely help you. What this tool does is implement
the Mod Rewrite Rule in your .htaccess file to secretly convert a URL to another,
such as with dynamic and static ones.
With the URL
Rewriting Tool, you can opt to rewrite single pages or entire directories.
Simply enter the URL into the box, press submit, and copy and paste the
generated code into your .htaccess file on the root of your website. You must
remember to place any additional rewrite commands in your .htaccess file for
each dynamic URL you want Apache to rewrite. Now, you can give out the static URL
links on your website without having to alter all of your dynamic URLs manually
because you are letting the Mod Rewrite Rule do the conversion for you, without
JavaScript, cloaking, or any sneaky tactics.
Another thing you must remember to do is to change
all of your links in your website to the static URLs in order to avoid
penalties by search engines due to having duplicate URLs. You could even add
your dynamic URLs to your Robots Exclusion Standard File (robots.txt) to keep
the search engines from spidering the duplicate URLs. Regardless of your
methods, after using the URL
Rewrite Tool, you should ideally have no links pointing to any of your old
dynamic URLs.
You have multiple reasons to utilize static URLs
in your website whenever possible. When it's not possible, and you need to keep
your database-driven content as those old dynamic URLs, you can still give
end-users and search engine a static URL to navigate, and all the while, they
are still your dynamic URLs in disguise. When a search engine engineer was
asked if this method was considered "cloaking", he responded that it
indeed was not, and that in fact, search engines prefer you do it this way. The
URL
Rewrite Tool not only saves you time and energy by helping you use static
URLs by converting them transparently to your dynamic URLs, but it will also
save your rankings in the search engines.
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