From SEO point of view, isn't it dangerous to give out a page without any practical value? If you advertise to have content for a particular category, but you actually don't, wouldn't that make the poeple who clicked on the link to just move along?
More importantly, would the empty category not make guys working at Google mark your website as spammy? Cause you have 100 categories in your sitemap, and only 10 actually contain products?
If you are not using them for content or other presentation you should hide/disable categories that are empty until you have products in them.
i'm looking for solution how to have a landing page with products which are filter by some attribute (ie. Brand = Addidas). I was checking advanced search but it doesnt provide layered navigation, which is requested by client.
What I found is the free module http://fishpig.co.uk/attribute-splash-pages.html. It seems to be working, but for each combination of attribute X attribute value I need to configure something in database. It's not useful if you need to maintain thousands of combinations.
My another idea is to review catalog/layer model to remove filtering by category but it probably destroy something :)
Have you any idea or direction where would I go?
Thanks, Jaro.
have a look at http://yoast.com/landing-pages-module-magento/
i've used both and find fishpigs much better for manual creation of optimised pages, but for blasting out auto landing pages yoast is ideal.
I'm having trouble finding a joomla module that displays articles on rows and columns, each article with a thumbnail and a title or a small description. For e.g. I want to put it on my first page with 3 columns and and 5 rows, for a travel agency website.
Does anyone know of such module? Could anyone help me find it?
If not, any idea of how I could build it? (very last resort)
Thanks!
Since native Joomla articles do not support thumbnails out of the box you are probably better off using a CCK to accomplish what you want. I know at least Zoo and K2 support images related to an item without any extra code and both have the ability to display content as you have described.
Google will now parse certain microdata (for example reviews) on your web pages and display the info in search results. They call this Rich Snippets
I am wondering is this page specific or domain specific?
I keep all my reviews on a separate review page thats linked to from the home page. But my review page itself is very unlikely to be displayed in a search result, more likely to be displayed is my homepage or product landing page. But being that the review microdata is not on these pages (but is on the website). I am wondering if the rich snippets will be shown for these pages?
They're tied to the page, effectively; a result which returns the homepage won't include content from another page. As with any other organic ranking scenario, Google aims to return the best individual page for a query; as such, if it percieves your homepage to be a more authoritive resource and result for the search query, it'll return that rather than the page containing the microformatted data.
I'd tentatively suggest that the wider problem is one of value attribution, and that undertaking some page-level SEO in order to clearly signpost content/context, and to ensure that content is distinct and relevant at page-level (and in one place for one topic) might help.
On my Joomla website, I'd like to have a "about our company" article always be the first article on the front page. I want the other articles to shift down in position as new articles are added, but to keep the "about our company" one constantly on top.
I tried setting the order of that article on the front page manager to -1, but it still shifted down when I added a new article.
Any ideas?
You could write that info in a module and publish that module in a position that shows up before the component.
Do you have the front page sorted by date? If you do then make the about us article have a created date of 2099-01-01 and make sure you switch off show date for that article
Unless you find an adequate plugin for this specific need, I'm afraid you have to manually modify the template.
Depending on the setup, you can use the section or category info as a "fake" article. Enable showing the section/category description in the menu item (it's off by default) and you'll have a text that is always at the top.
I was struggelng with the same issue,... and have found the solution in the joomla documentation.
In the frontpage manager set order number for the article that you want to be "always-on-top" to -1 (minus one). This will make sure it will always have a lower order number than the other articles, even when other people submit articles.
For Joomla 1.5, go to your FrontPage Manager. The article you want to always have at the top, type is -1 in the ORDER column (as William said above). Now next to the name of this column, there is a picture of a floppy disk - you MUST click on this icon to SAVE the order.
Now your WELCOME article is numbered -1 and will always be at the top of your front page.
This question is Google top result, yet Joomla has been upgraded many times since it was asked and answered. Here is a more recent option:
In Joomla 3.4, you can do this by going to the settings of the category that displays the articles, then to its Blog Layout, then set Article Order to Featured Articles Order. This makes featured articles appear above normal articles.
In 2020, one could add Custom Fields (available since Joomla 3.7) to Joomla articles, or just to articles in a certain category, and then modify the template to query this Custom Field and handle articles accordingly.
in the order number in joomla 1.5 setting the order number to a minus figure doesn't work, it keeps reverting back to the default number.