Google’s John Mueller said in a video hangout that Google Search does not specifically differentiate and treat differently category pages or filter pages or search pages or tag pages from other pages. John said it is not about the technical type of page it is, but rather what is on that page and how you link to it internally.
John said this at the 31:59 mark into the video. He said “we don’t try to recognize the difference between different category pages or filter pages or search pages.” “Essentially we see all of these pages as being equivalent and it’s more a matter of the kind of content that you’re providing there,” he added.
Later on, John explained how you can get these types of pages indexed and ranked, if you are having issues with that. Assuming it is not a technical issue, John said “look at your internal linking structure and see what you can do to make it so that we can find those pages a little bit easier. And that could be something like on your home page you list a section of popular categories or popular kinds of products and then you link to those pages directly. Or maybe do occasional blog posts with information about a specific kind of product and then from there you link to that kind of product page on your side. Which could be like a filter page it could be a category page whatever you want to do.”
Basically, put content on those pages that are useful and then make sure to link to them internally.
Here is the video embed where he said this:
Here is the transcript:
We have a new e-commerce store with lots of different variants and search queries for products. For example we sell diamond cutting disks. These have search queries like diamond cutting disk for tiles, wood, concrete. Our competitors are ranked with own categories for these products. We use filter pages which are optimized and are also indexable but the filter pages don’t get ranked or don’t get indexed. So should I create hundreds of unusual subcategories instead?
So, I think first of all the one important aspect here is that we don’t try to recognize the difference between different category pages or filter pages or search pages. Essentially we see all of these pages as being equivalent and it’s more a matter of the kind of content that you’re providing there.