As a marketer working in a recruitment agency, often the responsibility of optimising your agency’s website falls to you.
One important SEO consideration to make is whether you should structure your website with subdomains or off your www. domain as a subdirectory.
To help you make the right decision, here’s how to pick between subdomains and subdirectories.
A subdomain looks like this in your URL: jobs.yourcompany.com.
A subdirectory is a category, a bit like a folder on your primary site: www.yourcompany.com/jobs.
The option you go with will normally depend on which recrutiment software or type of recruitment website platform you choose to host your jobs pages on.
A subdomain allows you to take a separate function of your website like your job section and promote this on a separate URL.
For example, jobs.companyname.com. So, essentially it can be used as a standalone URL to be promoted and optimised. Now I often hear lots of chat about how a subdomain is not recognised by Google, however as far back as 2011, Google recognised a subdomain as an internal owned link to your main domain.
Therefore, you don’t need to worry about losing traction online by splitting your website in this way. In many ways if you're looking to use a specific jobs application, a subdomain allows you to do just this without having to move your whole website.
A subdirectory is essentially like a folder off your main domain (www). It’s an extension of your primary domain and if your main business is promoting jobs, it's often easier to create specific candidate journeys and dynamically link relevant job content on different pages with a click of a button.
It also has cost advantages in that you only have to pay one price for your domain, web hosting, and SSL security certificate.
If you want your recruitment website to get the benefits of an online job board function to your website but don’t fancy moving your complete website, a company owned subdomain allows you to achieve this.
Your company gains the benefits of recruitment software functionality and your candidates will never know that they are on a subdomain rather than a subdirectory.
Google will attribute the SEO power to your main URL as an internal link and you can fully track and monitor the effectiveness of your candidate journey.
Here's a good video from Matt Cutts, Head of Google's Webspam Team, explaining the pros and cons:
There are good reasons to use either a subdomain or subdirectory structure and it's different per company.
The best way to make your choice is by considering your internal split of tasks between recruitment marketing and recruitment activities in your CRM and determining which website structure will put your recruiters in the driving seat to reach, attract and engage candidates faster.