Suppose you’ve just composed the most objectively useful, engaging and brilliant web content ever. Now suppose that content remained unseen and unheard of, never once appearing in search results.
If your site isn't ready for Google’s mobile-first indexing, you’re risking both sales and traffic. Here’s how to find out and avoid potential ranking problems. Mobile traffic has already surpassed ...
Google published a video about what to do get Google to automatically re-index an entire website. The answer to the question presumed that the context was a major change to an entire website, ...
At the end of 2018, Google said mobile-first indexing — that is, using a website’s mobile version to index its pages — was being used for more than half the web pages in Google search results. Today, ...
Google has begun testing its mobile-first index, which will primarily look at the mobile version of your website for its ranking signals and fall back on the desktop version when there is no mobile ...
Though we hide in terror from Google's most recent algorithm update and rankings fluctuations, something else is always happening. From AI to data leaks, there's ...
How to identify and fix indexation bloat issues Indexation bloat is when a website has pages within a search engine “index” and can cause issues if not monitored and policed properly. It is an ...