Blog Navigation: Archives Aren’t Good Enough

What can we do to make blogs easier to navigate? As they stand, it can be hard to find things in the archives.

Not everyone has read everyone of your posts as they came out, and people often want to return to pages they’d read before.

Date-based archives aren’t any help. They may be the least-useful of blog navigation techniques. Sure, there may be times when you want to see the posts from a specific month, but not very often.

Search forms are great, possibly the best navigation method used on blogs today, but you have to know what so search before it’s of any use.

Then you have tags and categories, which have their uses, but are just another way to sort data. You need to have tags and/or categories on your blog. They help people find what they’re looking for, though if you have 3+ years of posts in your archives, it may still take awhile to find the posts worth reading.

The posts worth reading…

Essentially, you want a place to highlight your best work, the posts that everyone should read. While you obviously still have a lot of good stuff in your archives, to be unearthed by readers when they need it, this page would have the posts you want everyone to see right away.

Thinking about this, I ended up building my Featured Posts page, which is essentially a yearly archive of a “Featured” category I use for this purpose. Here’s how to set it up.

My Featured Posts scheme helps, but it’s not the ultimate answer. It’s just one piece of the blog navigation puzzle.

  • http://www.thetechjuice.com Sean Kelly

    I recently added a featured style section to my web site and found that it has been great. When looking at my google analytics site overview, it has received more clicks than that of my categories.This could just be inconsistent data, but I plan on keeping an eye on it to see how it turns out.

  • http://www.webmaster-source.com Matt

    I tend to have good success with my featured section. I think it was one of my better ideas… :D

    Have you heard of CrazyEgg? It may help you out in this situation. It allows you to monitor a page to see the most-clicked portions visually (as a heatmap). It’s wicked cool, and there is a free version available.

  • http://www.colorfulmars.com Franca Richard

    You featured-post page is really good I love it and read some useful posts, :)