Skip to content
  • Texas | Arizona | Virginia | Idaho | Illinois
  • (888) 705-0930
  • info@therawragency.com
Facebook-f Twitter Instagram Linkedin-in
rawr logo short
  • Home
  • About
  • Solutions
    colorized icons 04
    B2B Marketing
    colorized icons 05
    B2C Marketing
    colorized icons 06
    Online Visibility Management
  • Industries
    colorized icons 07
    Healthcare
    colorized icons 08
    Manufacturing
    colorized icons 10
    Home Services
    colorized icons 09
    Professional Services (B2B)
    colorized icons 11
    Retail
  • Services
    colorized icons 01
    Brand Strategy
    • Graphic Design
    • Corporate Brand Identity
    • Sales Enablement
    • Editorial Calendar Management
    colorized icons 02
    Website Design
    • WordPress Website Development
    • Conversion Rate Optimization
    • eCommerce Development
    • Content Strategy & Copywriting
    colorized icons 03
    Digital Marketing
    • Digital Marketing Strategy
    • Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
    • Pay-Per-Click (PPC) Management
    • Content Marketing & Digital PR
    • Account Based Marketing (B2B)
    • Marketing Automation
    • Social Media Management
  • Blog
  • Contact
Let's Talk

SMX Overtime: Managing your e-commerce category and product detail pages

SMX West 2020 wea photo 1920 800x450 2
  • March 13, 2020
  • General
  • Agency
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Last month I spoke at SMX West about managing product detail pages on e-commerce sites like Amazon, Walmart and others during the “SEO For E-commerce Category, Product Detail Pages” session. My co-presenter, Jill Kocher Brown, and I fielded a number of questions during the session. Here’s a few more I wanted to follow up on.

What is your opinion of D2C companies sending all of their product descriptions, etc. out via feeds to their wholesale partners to use? For example. Samsung sending all of their product descriptions via feed to Best Buy?

I think this is perfectly fine. Standardizing and optimizing product content across retailers (with the same content) will provide a consistent and great user experience for the consumer, which is the most important aspect. I have not seen Google penalize the DTC website or retailer websites for near-identical content. But, if this is something that worries you, I also think it’s acceptable to create a less-robust version for retailer syndication and create a more robust and optimized version for your DTC website.

Reviews – does it matter if we use reviews we collect and control vs. leaving the reviews open on the page?

No, I don’t think it matters; however, I would prefer to leave reviews open the product pages to capture as many reviews as possible. That said, moderation and verification of reviews are key and essential. Every review should be moderated for quality and can, hopefully, be verified as a genuine shopper. This doesn’t mean that if the reviewer leaves a bad review, you don’t post it.

Have you seen an e-commerce brand employ FAQ schema on their product detail pages as a competitive tactic to push big brand competitors further down the SERP’s like Amazon, Target, etc.?

I haven’t seen this as a tactic used by brands, and I haven’t seen organic results expand with FAQ content. Using FAQ schema should be employed for two reasons: one, the mark-up will help make the product page a more viable candidate for the Answer Box results to provide the answer to the user’s questions, and two, it will help search engines digest this content better.

Do search engines use reviews and ratings for SEO purposes or its solely for customer information improving convergence?

In my opinion, search engines are absolutely using reviews and product ratings to assess “best”-type queries where consumers are looking to make comparisons. Especially as the consumer query becomes more specific about long-tail characteristics and features.

Does your e-commerce URL structure need to match your inspirational/educational URL structure? Ex: category/color/style 

If you can, I would. Clearly, there will be business cases and rules that won’t allow for this. But your consumer search behaviors and need state work will also clue you in where this is more critical and necessary for some product sets than others. For example, in the beauty category, you would want to adopt a URL structure that accentuates the brand and color and style for hair color, but for hair tools, going that deep isn’t necessary.

More coverage from SMX

  • Smart Shopping campaigns: How to test and extract more value from automated campaigns
  • E-commerce category pages outperform product detail pages in SERPs
  • Paid search marketers can find success with top of funnel campaigns
  • What’s happening with featured snippets?

The post SMX Overtime: Managing your e-commerce category and product detail pages appeared first on Search Engine Land.


Source: IAB

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Recent Blog Posts

9 Hidden Revenue Blockers Every CRO Needs to Eliminate

February 3, 2025

What Is B2B Appointment Setting?

November 29, 2024

Leveraging LinkedIn for Targeted Growth

November 12, 2024

Mastering B2B Prospecting: Key Strategies for Sales Success

November 4, 2024

Maximize Marketing ROI: How Cost per Lead Can Fuel Your Business Growth

June 13, 2024
View More
rawr logo short
Facebook-f Twitter Instagram Linkedin-in
Get In Touch
  • Texas | Arizona | Virginia | Idaho | Illinois
  • (888) 705-0930
  • info@therawragency.com
Send An Email

"*" indicates required fields

Copyright 2025 | The RAWR Agency, LLC. |

Sitemap | Privacy Policy

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.OkNo