How to Structure a Website for Multi-Service Businesses (AM02-07)
“Structure is strategy. Rank follows clarity.”
– Schieler
Foundations: SEO Theory & Silo Models
In SEO, structure isn’t just technical, it’s strategic. It’s how you express purpose, hierarchy, and intent across your site. There’s no one-size-fits-all model. Your ideal structure depends on domain authority, scalability goals, and how clearly you can communicate topical relevance to both humans and search engines.
A messy structure weakens your message. A clean structure amplifies it.
Flat Architecture vs Silo Structure
- Flat Structure: All pages live one level deep off the root. This makes crawling easier and spreads PageRank evenly. Works great when you’re light on backlinks or early in site growth.
- Silo Structure: Groups pages by category, topic, or location. Helps build topical authority and control internal PageRank flow, but it requires more planning, more backlinks, and more upkeep.
Think of PageRank like water: a flat site is a sprinkler. A siloed site is a directed hose.
Physical vs Virtual Silos
- Physical Silos: The hierarchy is visible in the URL, such as
/services/city/service-name. This enforces structure but adds depth. - Virtual Silos: Structure created through internal links and menus, even if URLs are flat. More flexible, faster to build, but relies on thoughtful link strategy.
Both are valid. The best approach is the one you’ll maintain and scale. Just ensure every page lives in a coherent neighborhood of related topics.
Google doesn’t just read pages , it reads context. Your structure tells the story before your content does.
Step 1: Initial Planning
- Use the Keyword Research SOP (AM05-01): Define your services and locations based on actual demand.
- Choose your model: Service-First vs Location-First, structure your site around what customers search for most.
- Draft your sitemap: Use spreadsheets, whiteboards, or diagrams to map out page types, paths, and relationships.
- Plan your links: Each page should link to its parent and sibling pages to form a strong internal mesh.
Strategy before structure. The smartest layouts come from knowing what your users actually need to find.
Step 2: Structure Options
Option 1: Flat with Virtual Silos
https://www.example.com/painting-richmond-va
https://www.example.com/painting-virginia-beach-va
https://www.example.com/drywall-richmond-va
- Group content using sidebar menus, footers, or service-area navigation blocks.
- Interlink services within the same city and cities for the same service.
- Quick to build, easier to maintain, ideal for service businesses targeting multiple local areas.
Option 2: Physical Silos
https://www.example.com/services/
└── richmond/painting/
└── richmond/drywall/
https://www.example.com/locations/
└── virginia-beach/painting/
- Use WordPress parent/child pages or directory nesting to reflect hierarchy.
- Set permalinks thoughtfully ,
/category/post-nameworks, but keep slugs short and purposeful. - Ideal for businesses expanding in scale, or sites with editorial content needing strict topical flow.
Build with expansion in mind. Every layer of depth should serve a reason, not just a format.
Step 3: Interlinking and CRO Optimization
- Homepage: Link to core service categories and top-level location overviews.
- Services: Link to every city-specific version of that service.
- Locations: Link to all services available in that city or region.
- Link from everywhere: Menus, breadcrumbs, footers, body copy, and CTAs, all help distribute flow.
Structure is static. Links make it dynamic. They guide both users and search engines through your value paths.
Step 4: Launch Best Practices
- 70% Duplicate Content Rule: Vary intros, headings, CTAs, testimonials, and local offers.
- Templates are your friend: Use consistent layouts to build fast, then personalize what matters.
- Meta optimization: Use tools like Zynith SEO to dynamically populate titles, descriptions, and schema.
- Update your sitemap: Especially if you’re adding new paths or deeper silos. Submit in GSC.
A launch isn’t a finish line, it’s your runway. Clean launches index faster, rank smoother, and convert stronger.
Advanced SEO Structure Insights
- Breadcrumb schema: Improves crawl clarity and gives users visual context.
- Canonical tags: Required for duplicated layouts (like service+location combos).
- Authority sculpting: Link from weaker utility pages (TOS, privacy) toward stronger conversion pages.
- Contextual anchor variety: Use partial match, semantic, branded, and question-based links.
- Prevent dead ends: Every page should give and receive meaningful links.
You’re not just building a site, you’re constructing an ecosystem. Every link is a lifeline.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Only using nav links: In-content links carry more semantic weight. Use them liberally.
- Over-nesting: Too many slashes or folders dilute equity. Stay lean.
- Launching thin pages: Avoid pages under 300 words unless they serve a utility function.
- Not linking to new pages: Orphan pages waste content, always integrate into the internal link web.
- Skipping sitemap + indexation checks: New builds must be submitted and monitored in Search Console.
Most SEO errors come from assumptions. Be deliberate. Be structural. Be indexable.
Book List to Sharpen Your SEO & Audit Skills
SEO Fundamentals & Strategy
- The Art of SEO by Eric Enge
- SEO 2024 by Adam Clarke
- Product-Led SEO by Eli Schwartz
Content, Copywriting & Influence
- Everybody Writes by Ann Handley
- Building a StoryBrand by Donald Miller
- Influence by Robert B. Cialdini
Video Creation & YouTube Growth
- Tube Ritual by Brian G. Johnson
- YouTube Secrets by Sean Cannell & Benji Travis
- How to Shoot Video That Doesn’t Suck by Steve Stockman
Mindset, Workflow & Business Systems
- The 1-Page Marketing Plan by Allan Dib
- Deep Work by Cal Newport
- Atomic Habits by James Clear










