This site map gives visitors a clear overview of the main public sections on Findnoise. It is designed for people who prefer a direct list of pages instead of using search or browsing category cards. It also supports transparent navigation by showing how the sound catalog, guides, and policy pages fit together.
Findnoise is organized around long-form sound pages, practical written guides, and essential trust pages. The main listening areas are White Noise and Rain Sounds, with smaller controlled sections for Fireplace Sounds and Nature Sounds. The guide library provides written help for choosing and using sleep sounds, and the policy pages explain contact, privacy, cookies, terms, and editorial standards.
Main sections
- Home — the main entry point for the Findnoise library, featured sounds, guide links, categories, and site overview.
- Start Here — a practical introduction for new visitors who want to understand how to choose and use Findnoise sounds.
- Sound Library Guide — an overview of the Findnoise sound categories and how different textures fit together.
- Guides — the main index for written articles about sleep sounds, white noise, rain ambience, volume, focus, and sound choice.
- FAQ — answers to common questions about Findnoise, embedded videos, sound duration, volume, and site navigation.
Sound categories
- White Noise — appliance hums, fan ambience, mechanical textures, refrigerator noise, heater sounds, and steady indoor masking recordings.
- Rain Sounds — rainfall, window rain, soft thunder, and water-based ambience for sleep, reading, relaxation, and calm background listening.
- Fireplace Sounds — a small controlled section for warm crackling fire ambience and cozy room atmosphere.
- Nature Sounds — a small controlled section for outdoor ambience, birds, crickets, and natural background textures.
Guide articles
- White Noise for Sleep: A Practical Listening Guide
- Fan Noise vs White Noise: Which Is Better for Sleep?
- Rain Sounds for Sleep: When They Work Best
- How to Use Background Noise for Focus and Study
- White Noise, Brown Noise, and Pink Noise: Simple Differences
- Best Volume Level for Sleep Sounds
- How Long Should Sleep Sounds Play Overnight?
- Why Appliance Sounds Can Feel Calming
- How to Choose Sleep Sounds for Your Room
Trust and information pages
- About — explains what Findnoise is, how the site relates to the official YouTube channel, and what kind of content the site publishes.
- Editorial Policy — explains how Findnoise approaches written content, sound descriptions, corrections, responsible claims, and advertising clarity.
- Contact — provides the official email address for business inquiries, copyright questions, feedback, and general support.
- Terms — describes site terms, embedded platforms, permitted use, external links, and related responsibilities.
- Privacy Policy — explains personal information, third-party services, YouTube embeds, advertising, and visitor privacy topics.
- Cookies Policy — explains cookies and similar technologies used in connection with Google AdSense, YouTube embedded players, consent tools, and site functionality.
- Accessibility Statement — explains navigation, readable content, embedded media, feedback, and usability standards.
How to move through the site
If you want to listen immediately, begin with a sound category. If you want to understand which type of sound may fit your room, begin with Start Here or the Sound Library Guide. If you have a specific question, use the FAQ or search. If you need policy or contact information, use the trust pages listed above.
The site is intentionally organized so public pages can be reached through normal clicks. Visitors should not need a hidden URL or account login to reach the main catalog, guide articles, policy pages, or contact information. This supports a cleaner user experience and a more complete public website structure.
How this map helps visitors
The site map is not a substitute for normal navigation. It is a backup overview for visitors who want to see the complete structure at once. A user may arrive from a search result, open one sound page, and then want to understand what else the site offers. This map gives that visitor a direct path to categories, guides, policy pages, and contact information.
Clear navigation is especially important on a sound website because many pages can look similar at first glance. Several pages may mention sleep, white noise, background audio, or rain. The map helps distinguish between listening pages, guide articles, and trust pages so visitors do not feel trapped in a repetitive list.
How this map helps quality review
A complete public website should make its important pages reachable without relying on hidden URLs. This map supports that standard by linking to the main content areas and policy pages from one visible location. It also reduces the chance that a valuable guide is disconnected from the rest of the site.
The map is intentionally human-readable. It does not replace the XML sitemap used by search engines. Instead, it gives visitors a practical view of how Findnoise is organized. The XML sitemap remains available for crawling, while this page exists for people.
Recommended visitor paths
If you are here for sleep sounds, open White Noise or Rain Sounds first. If you are unsure which texture fits your room, open Start Here or the Sound Library Guide. If you want a quick explanation before listening, use the FAQ or Sound Glossary. If you want to understand how content is made, read How Findnoise Sounds Are Made.
If you need legal, privacy, or contact information, use the trust pages. These pages explain how the site handles privacy, cookies, terms, editorial standards, and communication. Keeping these pages visible makes the site easier to evaluate and easier for visitors to trust.
Maintenance note
This map should stay aligned with the live site. If new major guide pages or trust pages are added, the map should be updated. If a page is removed, its map link should be removed as well. Broken navigation creates a poor user experience and should be avoided.
Findnoise aims to keep the public site stable, organized, and easy to browse. The site map is one part of that structure, alongside the header menu, footer, sidebar browse links, category pages, guide index, and search page.
Why every major page is listed
This map lists the main public pages because a visitor should be able to understand the site without guessing where important information is hidden. A sound site can quickly become confusing if category pages, guide pages, policy pages, and contact pages are not connected clearly.
Findnoise uses this map as a simple public directory. It helps visitors find the listening catalog, written guides, trust pages, and support information from one location. This is especially useful for people who arrive through a search result and want to understand the broader site.
Difference between this map and search
Search is useful when a visitor already knows what they want. The site map is useful when a visitor wants an overview. Search answers a specific query such as rain, fan, volume, or white noise. The map shows the structure of the entire public site.
Both tools are useful, but they serve different needs. Keeping both available makes the site easier to use and reduces dependence on a single navigation method.