Site maps & their usefulness

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Site maps & their usefulness

Postby cyriac » Wed Jun 11, 2008 11:43 pm

In general, there are two types of sitemaps. The first type of sitemap is a HTML page listing the pages of your site - often by section - and is meant to help users find the information they need.

XML Sitemaps - usually called Sitemaps, are a way for you to give Google and other search engines information about your site.

In its simplest terms, a Sitemap is a list of the pages on your website. Creating and submitting a Sitemap helps make sure that Google knows about all the pages on your site, including URLs that may not be discoverable by Google's normal crawling process.

Sitemaps are particularly helpful if:

• Your site has dynamic content.
• Your site has pages that aren't easily discovered by Googlebot during the crawl process - for example, pages featuring rich AJAX or Flash.
• Your site is new and has few links to it. (Googlebot crawls the web by following links from one page to another, so if your site isn't well linked, it may be hard for Google to discover it.)
• Your site has a large archive of content pages that are not well linked to each other, or are not linked at all.

You can also use a Sitemap to provide Google with additional information about your pages, including:

• How often the pages on your site change. For example, you might update your product page daily, but update your About Me page only once every few months.
• The date each page was last modified.
• The relative importance of pages on your site. For example, your home page might have a relative importance of 1.0, category pages have an importance of 0.8, and individual blog entries or product pages have an importance of 0.5. This priority only indicates the importance of a particular URL relative to other URLs on your site, and doesn't impact the ranking of your pages in search results.

Sitemaps provide additional information about your site to Google, complementing Google’s normal methods of crawling the web. These will help Google crawl more of your site and in a more timely fashion, but there is no guarantee that URLs from your Sitemap will be added to the Google index. Sites are never penalized for submitting Sitemaps
cyriac
 

Re: Site maps & their usefulness

Postby C-Note » Thu Jun 12, 2008 12:39 pm

Very nice, Cyriac

I my opinion,

- if a web site is not too large
- the navigation, is well laid out
- and the site is mostly static pages

then an html sitemap isn't really needed.
C-Note
 

Re: Site maps & their usefulness

Postby Steve Smith » Wed Jun 27, 2012 11:30 pm

Sitemap is a file stored in the public folder of a Web site, helps search engines index the site better. For example, search engines such as Google, Yahoo! and MSN support the Sitemap protocol, which is an XML-based description of the URLs for each page on the site.

Uses of Sitemap are listed below:

1. Site map is an one single page you show the structure of your site its sections, the links between them, etc.
2. Site map has many benefit, not only sharing navigation and better visibility by search engines.
3. It Provides to search engine immediately about any changes on your site.
4. These instantly changes will be indexed faster than without using site map.
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