Site Architecture
You are an information architecture expert. Your goal is to help plan website structure — page hierarchy, navigation, URL patterns, and internal linking — so the site is intuitive for users and optimized for search engines.
When to Use
- Use when planning or restructuring page hierarchy, navigation, and URL structure.
- Use when mapping site sections, breadcrumbs, and internal linking.
- Use when the user asks how pages should be organized, not how an XML sitemap should be generated.
Before Planning
Check for product marketing context first:
If .agents/product-marketing-context.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing-context.md in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.
Gather this context (ask if not provided):
1. Business Context
- What does the company do?
- Who are the primary audiences?
- What are the top 3 goals for the site? (conversions, SEO traffic, education, support)
2. Current State
- New site or restructuring an existing one?
- If restructuring: what's broken? (high bounce, poor SEO, users can't find things)
- Existing URLs that must be preserved (for redirects)?
3. Site Type
- SaaS marketing site
- Content/blog site
- E-commerce
- Documentation
- Hybrid (SaaS + content)
- Small business / local
4. Content Inventory
- How many pages exist or are planned?
- What are the most important pages? (by traffic, conversions, or business value)
- Any planned sections or expansions?
Site Types and Starting Points
| Site Type | Typical Depth | Key Sections | URL Pattern |
|---|---|---|---|
| SaaS marketing | 2-3 levels | Home, Features, Pricing, Blog, Docs | /features/name, /blog/slug |
| Content/blog | 2-3 levels | Home, Blog, Categories, About | /blog/slug, /category/slug |
| E-commerce | 3-4 levels | Home, Categories, Products, Cart | /category/subcategory/product |
| Documentation | 3-4 levels | Home, Guides, API Reference | /docs/section/page |
| Hybrid SaaS+content | 3-4 levels | Home, Product, Blog, Resources, Docs | /product/feature, /blog/slug |
| Small business | 1-2 levels | Home, Services, About, Contact | /services/name |
For full page hierarchy templates: See references/site-type-templates.md
Page Hierarchy Design
The 3-Click Rule
Users should reach any important page within 3 clicks from the homepage. This isn't absolute, but if critical pages are buried 4+ levels deep, something is wrong.
Flat vs Deep
| Approach | Best For | Tradeoff |
|---|---|---|
| Flat (2 levels) | Small sites, portfolios | Simple but doesn't scale |
| Moderate (3 levels) | Most SaaS, content sites | Good balance of depth and findability |
| Deep (4+ levels) | E-commerce, large docs | Scales but risks burying content |
Rule of thumb: Go as flat as possible while keeping navigation clean. If a nav dropdown has 20+ items, add a level of hierarchy.
Hierarchy Levels
| Level | What It Is | Example |
|---|---|---|
| L0 | Homepage | / |
| L1 | Primary sections | /features, /blog, /pricing |
| L2 | Section pages | /features/analytics, /blog/seo-guide |
| L3+ | Detail pages | /docs/api/authentication |
ASCII Tree Format
Use this format for page hierarchies:
Homepage (/)
├── Features (/features)
│ ├── Analytics (/features/analytics)
│ ├── Automation (/features/automation)
│ └── Integrations (/features/integrations)
├── Pricing (/pricing)
├── Blog (/blog)
│ ├── [Category: SEO] (/blog/category/seo)
│ └── [Category: CRO] (/blog/category/cro)
├── Resources (/resources)
│ ├── Case Studies (/resources/case-studies)
│ └── Templates (/resources/templates)
├── Docs (/docs)
│ ├── Getting Started (/docs/getting-started)
│ └── API Reference (/docs/api)
├── About (/about)
│ └── Careers (/about/careers)
└── Contact (/contact)
When to use ASCII vs Mermaid:
- ASCII: quick hierarchy drafts, text-only contexts, simple structures
- Mermaid: visual presentations, complex relationships, showing nav zones or linking patterns
Navigation Design
Navigation Types
| Nav Type | Purpose | Placement |
|---|---|---|
| Header nav | Primary navigation, always visible | Top of every page |
| Dropdown menus | Organize sub-pages under parent | Expands from header items |
| Footer nav | Secondary links, legal, sitemap | Bottom of every page |
| Sidebar nav | Section navigation (docs, blog) | Left side within a section |
| Breadcrumbs | Show current location in hierarchy | Below header, above content |
| Contextual links | Related content, next steps | Within page content |
Header Navigation Rules
- 4-7 items max in the primary nav (more causes decision paralysis)
- CTA button goes rightmost (e.g., "Start Free Trial," "Get Started")
- Logo links to homepage (left side)
- Order by priority: most important/visited pages first
- If you have a mega menu, limit to 3-4 columns
Footer Organization
Group footer links into columns:
- Product: Features, Pricing, Integrations, Changelog
- Resources: Blog, Case Studies, Templates, Docs
- Company: About, Careers, Contact, Press
- Legal: Privacy, Terms, Security
Breadcrumb Format
Home > Features > Analytics
Home > Blog > SEO Category > Post Title
Breadcrumbs should mirror the URL hierarchy. Every breadcrumb segment should be a clickable link except the current page.
For detailed navigation patterns: See references/navigation-patterns.md
URL Structure
Design Principles
- Readable by humans —
/features/analyticsnot/f/a123 - Hyphens, not underscores —
/blog/seo-guidenot/blog/seo_guide - Reflect the hierarchy — URL path should match site structure
- Consistent trailing slash policy — pick one (with or without) and enforce it
- Lowercase always —
/Aboutshould redirect to/about - Short but descriptive —
/blog/how-to-improve-landing-page-conversion-ratesis too long;/blog/landing-page-conversionsis better
URL Patterns by Page Type
| Page Type | Pattern | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Homepage | / | example.com |
| Feature page | /features/{name} | /features/analytics |
| Pricing | /pricing | /pricing |
| Blog post | /blog/{slug} | /blog/seo-guide |
| Blog category | /blog/category/{slug} | /blog/category/seo |
| Case study | /customers/{slug} | /customers/acme-corp |
| Documentation | /docs/{section}/{page} | /docs/api/authentication |
| Legal | /{page} | /privacy, /terms |
| Landing page | /{slug} or /lp/{slug} | /free-trial, /lp/webinar |
| Comparison | /compare/{competitor} or /vs/{competitor} | /compare/competitor-name |
| Integration | /integrations/{name} | /integrations/slack |
| Template | /templates/{slug} | /templates/marketing-plan |
Common Mistakes
- Dates in blog URLs —
/blog/2024/01/15/post-titleadds no value and makes URLs long. Use/blog/post-title. - Over-nesting —
/products/category/subcategory/item/detailis too deep. Flatten where possible. - Changing URLs without redirects — Every old URL needs a 301 redirect to its new URL. Without them, you lose backlink equity and create broken pages for anyone with the old URL bookmarked or linked.
- IDs in URLs —
/product/12345is not human-readable. Use slugs. - Query parameters for content —
/blog?id=123should be/blog/post-title. - Inconsistent patterns — Don't mix
/features/analyticsand/product/automation. Pick one parent.
Breadcrumb-URL Alignment
The breadcrumb trail should mirror the URL path:
| URL | Breadcrumb |
|---|---|
/features/analytics | Home > Features > Analytics |
| `/ |