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Not every site needs a site map, they can certainly be a good idea. Site maps provide a dual purpose: They provide search engine spiders easy access to all of your site pages and they provide site visitors easy access to all of your site pages. The difference is that search engines and visitors access your site map differently and therefore there are different methods that need to be applied to creating site map(s) that are friendly for both engines and search spiders. Small sites typically don't need a site map so long as all pages are linked in the main navigation. Once you get into main and sub-navigation menu's then site maps are helpful in allowing search engines and visitors to quickly find anything they are looking for within just a couple of clicks. A single site map can be used for both purposes or multiple site maps can be created. Here we'll address creating site maps for spiders and humans separately. Site Map For Spiders .xml file Robots.txt file Keep current Site Map For Visitors Navigation links Additional page links Overview Heading and layout Text links & descriptions Keep current As I said above, not every site needs a site map. But those that do should be sure that the site map(s) they create are actually benefiting them. And the best way to do that is to make sure your site maps provide maximum usability for visitors and search engine spiders. | |||||||
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March 12th Nice work Stoney. I have a question for you - how often do use a sitemap to find what you want on a site? To me, that's like a last resort. I've found an HTML sitemap to be pretty useful. I have an indexing tool that churns out an unordered list of links, using page titles as anchor text. This works for me and the spiders seem to like it too, although I'm not sure how visitor-friendly it is (the page titles are unique). I haven't worried about this in the past, as I've tried to make sure my navigation system is easy enough to use... should I pay more attention to the sitemap as a user-navigation tool? Reply
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March 13th Hi Jenny,
Sitemaps are like insurance. You don't want people to have to use them but when they need it you want to make sure it gives them everything they need. I use a site's sitemap on rare occasions but it needs to be able to help me find what I'm looking for. The tools that auto generate as you suggest are OK but they don't do much in the way of usability. I suggest taking the time to develop one that is more usable. Reply
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March 12th For the newbies (or perhaps people who don't have a clue about internet marketing), what is the easiest way to make or generate a site map?
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March 13th Hi Angeih,
I think it depends on how big your site is and what kind of sitemap you're creating. There are a lot of online tools that will help you generate an XML sitemap. When creating an HTML sitemap, if your site is under 50 or 100 pages then you might just want to build it yourself. Anything larger then you might find a decent program that will auto create it for you (make sure it outputs in a user friendly format) or find a programmer to develop a tool for you. Reply
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