I am really surprised this is not already a feature. When you have 100s of pages, it becomes quickly unmanageable without a folder structure. For example, if you have 20 open positions on 20 different pages, it would make a whole lot of sense to put them into a folder called jobs. Then you would have greatco.com/jobs/CMO/, greatco.com/jobs/user-engagement-manager/ pages. It would be good for SEO.
There is a tree now, thank you HubSpot!! I still agree with the original post about a folder. I am archiving some pages now to keep the space tidy and a folder would make it much more organized.
Yes, I definitely also wanted folder structures so I could do something like;
mycompany.com/solutions/page - not for visual simplicity - but also because as we keep building out our pages - we're seeing more "solution-x-y-z" then "solution-a-b-c" etc - should definitely be a better way to manage this in the backend.
Another thought is that it could just automatically create the folders based on the page url structure. so if your url structure is like /about/careers/junior-web-developer. It could just break things up into an about folder and a careers subfolder inside of it.
Currently managing a website with multple domains in one HubSpot account, and it gets confusing to sort through different website pages even if we're using a naming convention to organize content.
I can't believe this is still not a thing! Even with just 20 pages, our site is still a pain to understand and organize visually. (Factor in drafts/subfolders/subpages etc) Is there really no ETA to put in even a basic visual organiser tree? the current folder option is ~useless
I agree to all the inputs here, even I would love to have a folder option to have all the related pages of a website, for more organized effort.
However, I did tweak a bit, we have the 'View' option in website pages (built by me, built by someone else, recent etc) where we could create a new view. Name the project name and make it viewable for you or your entire team. Then we could filter the results by 'name' and add the keyword (name of the pages in which a name commonly appears like ABC - subpage-.... When I filtered, now I could see all the related pages in a view - think its workaround till Hubspot adds the feature (folder). Hope this is helpful!