Everything in Its Place: How to Use Categories to Organize your Website
If you鈥檙e keeping up with Web Services, you might know that we wrote an article about our virtual spring cleaning last month. A vital part of this clean-up was using tags and categories.
Continuing the analogy of spring cleaning, categories and tags are like your bookshelves, cupboards, and other storage. Leaving your things piled on the floor makes it harder for you and others to find what they鈥檙e looking for. Web content is similar: categories and tags provide a structure for your content and make it easier to find, group, and access related content.
Tags or Categories?
If you have read our spring-cleaning article closely, you might notice that we used tags to organize our posts. So, what鈥檚 the difference between a tag and a category?
- Tags are only available for the post content type and provide a secondary way to organize your post content
- Categories can be applied to any content type, not just posts. Because of this, the rest of this article will refer to categories, but if you鈥檙e working with posts, tags will also fulfill many of the same functions.
Are Categories Worth It?
Maybe now, looking at the task before you, you鈥檙e not sure if it鈥檚 worth the time and effort to categorize your content. However, you鈥檒l most likely feel differently the next time you鈥檙e searching for a piece of content on your site.
Rather than wait for the motivation that comes with the panic of realizing you can鈥檛 find a piece of content, get motivated with the following benefits of categorizing your content:
Organization for you and your team

The most noticeable benefit of using categories is probably the improved organization within your website. Like the example above, you鈥檙e most likely to notice a lack of organization when it prevents you from finding the content you鈥檙e looking for.
Since our spring cleaning, we currently have 183 posts on our Web Services website. That鈥檚 quite a lot of content to look through when searching for a specific post, but we鈥檝e used categories to separate our posts into groups of related content that are more easily sifted through.
Organization for your visitors

You鈥檙e not the only one who benefits from organized categories, however. Visitors to your site use your categories to navigate to relevant content. At the bottom of a post in CMS, the post鈥檚 categories are available as links. Clicking them brings the visitor to a list of other posts in that category, helping them navigate your website.
This is great not only to help visitors find content, but also will likely help keep them on your site, making it more likely that they鈥檒l explore your other content and perhaps engage with your calls to action (ex. signing up for a newsletter).
Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
Search engines also appreciate the use of categories. Google indexes categories to get an idea of your site鈥檚 content and direct appropriate traffic to it.
Using categories can cause search engines to rank your site higher in search results for terms that are relevant to your site鈥檚 category, resulting in more relevant search traffic.
How to Use Categories
Both CMS and CuTheme have the ability to categorize your content. The basic principles of assigning categories and using them to pull content onto a page are consistent between the two themes, but while CMS has different types of listings for different content types, CuTheme centralizes all listings with the listings block.
Learn how to use categories on your CMS or CuTheme site with the following tutorials:
CMS
- Categories: view our tutorial on categories in CMS here.
- Listing: CMS uses different post elements to list different content types, but the process is pretty similar overall. On your page:
- Select Add Post Element
- Choose 鈥淟ist (content type)鈥, for example 鈥淟ist News鈥
- Select the category or categories you would like to be displayed of that content type
- You may have other customization options in this screen
- Click Insert Element
- If you鈥檙e looking to list a specific content type, browse our CMS Help Centre for the content type and there should be instructions on listing it. For example, this is the tutorial for listing posts.
CuTheme
- Categories: .
- Listing: CuTheme uses the listing block to pull content onto a page. After adding this listing block, you just need to pick the type of content you鈥檇 like to display and then you can select categories to list specific content. .
Categories Across Content Types
Since categories are used for many different content types, this means that there are different types of categories on your website. For example, you can鈥檛 put files into an events category. If you have files for students as well as events for students, you will need to create both a 鈥淪tudents鈥 File Category and a 鈥淪tudents鈥 Event Category.
Best Practices
Using categories is already a great step in organizing your website and reaping the SEO and usability benefits. However, here are a few additional tips to help you make the most of your categorizing:
Naming Categories
- When naming your categories, use simple, clear, and descriptive names. For example, don鈥檛 use non-descript category names like 鈥淥ther鈥, or ambiguous ones like 鈥淚mportant鈥.
- Be consistent when naming content. For example, if you use singular category names for the most part, don鈥檛 mix in plurals.
Number of Categories
- Use categories that will cover a large group of posts, not just one or two. If you think of categories like a library, you should have sections divided by genre, not by author.
- Don鈥檛 create too many categories. If you have almost as many categories as you do content, then you鈥檙e just as disorganized as you were without them! Again, create general categories rather than hyper-specific ones and you shouldn鈥檛 find that you need too many categories.
Categorizing Content
- Assign posts to more than one category where appropriate. For example, this post is categorized as both 鈥溞影稍 CMS blog鈥 and 鈥淲riting for the Web Tips.鈥 This lets us display the post in multiple locations, as well as gives readers an opportunity to explore either category by clicking the category name at the bottom of the post.
Category Users Across 杏吧原创
Many websites across our virtual 杏吧原创 campus use categories to organize their content. Here are some examples of different sites making good use of categories:
- Pages: The ITS Help Centre, which is a knowledge base style site, has pages listed by category.
- Files: Awards and Financial Aid lists application forms using a file listing on their Forms and Templates page. These files are categorized as either 鈥淏ursaries鈥 or 鈥淔inancial Aid鈥
- People: Neuroscience uses categories to showcase the accomplishments of their undergraduates after completing their degree. These people posts are organized by category, such as 鈥淓mployed in a Related Field鈥, 鈥淢edical School鈥, or 鈥淕raduate School鈥.
- Posts: 杏吧原创鈥檚 Academic job postings use categories to sort by faculty. By opening the 鈥淔ilter by Faculty or Type of Opportunity鈥 and selecting a type of posting, you are brought to a page where only postings in that category are listed.
- FAQs: The International Student Services Office has a Frequently Asked Questions page which uses FAQ categories to divide the inquiries international students may have by category, such as 鈥淚mmigration鈥, 鈥淯HIP鈥, or 鈥淪tudent Life鈥.
Hopefully these examples of the various uses of categories, as well as the above list of benefits and instructions on how to implement categories, inspire you to categorize content on your own site.