How does Progressive Loading, aka what Facebook does, impact proper search indexation?
-
My client is planning on integrating progressive loading into their main product level pages (those pages most important to conversions and revenue).
I am not skilled on "progressive laoding" but was told this is what Facebook does. Currently, the site's pages are tabbed and use Ajax. Is there any negative impact by changing this up by including progressive loading?
If anyone can help me understand what this is and how it might impact a site from an SEO perspective, please let me know.
thanks a ton!!
Janet
-
Ok so long time in getting back to this, but here's what the client was actually referring to and found a good post on optimization around the new approach. SEO Tips for Infinite Scrolling | Adam Sherk - excellent read! Wasn't sure exactly what this programmer/client was referring to, but this was it! Thanks all for the help!
-
I think what your developer is talking about, and what Facebook does, is the idea of all of your content being on one page. Progressive loading or "infinite scroll" is when you scroll down to the bottom of a page (like e.g. a category page on your blog) and more content loads on the page itself, as opposed to having to click to page 2 of results to view more content.
The problem with doing this is that even though the content continues to load on the same URL, it's being pulled from another place - so anything beyond that first set of content is being loaded by a JavaScript call. That means that search engines can't index that content that's being loaded as the user scrolls down - and users with JavaScript turned off also won't be able to view the rest of your content. This can be a big problem on main product level pages like your client is thinking of doing, since any links to other products that are beyond that initial page load won't be crawled by search engines.
If you're going to go the infinite scrolling/progressive loading route, make sure that when JavaScript is disabled, there's a crawlable "next page" link to a new, static URL for the next page of results. Basically, make sure that there's a more old-school "previous page/next page" environment with static page URLs that search engines and users without JavaScript can browse, in addition to your progressive loading page.
Here's a link to a similar question from last year that has more information: http://www.seomoz.org/q/infinite-scrolling-vs-pagination-on-an-ecommerce-site
-
That doesn't make much sense to me.
Just look at how Facebook loads... All the text pops right up, and then the images filter in. It just doesn't make any sense to me how it could 'exclude' anything.
Is there a way you could implement it on a small scale just to test it in the beginning? Maybe a page or two, or just a section of the site to start with... Then you would at least have some data to look at and help you make an informed decision.
I haven't been in this part of the world for very long, but I know that progressive loading isn't something that has popped up much in my research/reading. Even when I looked around (briefly) I didn't find anything that connected to SEO.
-
Thank you Modulusman - I thought so too - but the way the programmer was talking made it seem like it was some major exclusion of content or something.
Thanks for your input!
-
I may be wrong here... but isn't progressive loading mostly for images?
If this is what you're talking about.. I'm not sure how it would make much of a difference how things are indexed. It seems like "once upon a time" things had to be saved a certain way, but I'm not even sure that's the case anymore.
It may help with mobile conversion... depending on whether you're more focused on copy or media.
I know this isn't much, but maybe it will jog something for someone.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Pages not indexable?
Hello, I've been trying to find out why Google Search Console finds these pages non-indexable: https://www.visitflorida.com/en-us/eat-drink.html https://www.visitflorida.com/en-us/florida-beaches/beach-finder.html Moz and SEMrush both crawl the pages and show no errors but GSC comes back with, "blocked by robots.txt" but I've confirmed it is not. Anyone have any thoughts? 6AYn1TL
Technical SEO | | KenSchaefer0 -
No related searches
Does anyone have any insight as to why a site wouldn't show any results when using this google search operator:
Technical SEO | | SoulSurfer8
related:site.com There are no results appearing. We recently moved from .com to .org with 301 redirects in place and change of address tool submitted. There are no penalties or warnings in search console but we have seen a significant decrease in search traffic. Thanks in advance.0 -
Why wont google Index this page?
A week ago i accidentally changed this page settings in my CMS to "disable & dont index" as i was going to replace this page with another, but this didnt happen, but i forgot to switch the settings back! http://www.over50choices.co.uk/funeral-planning/funeral-plans Anyhow in an effort to get it back up quickly i submitted in GWTs but its still not indexed. When i use several SEO on page checking tools it has the Meta Title data as "Form" and not the correct title. Any ideas please? Yours frustrated Ash
Technical SEO | | AshShep10 -
Why is my blog disappearing from Google index?
My Google blogger blog is about 10 months old. In that time i have worked really hard with adding unique content, building relationships with other bloggers in the same niche, and done some inbound marketing. 2 weeks ago I updated the template to something cleaner, with a little more "wordpress" feel to it. This means i've messed about with the code a lot in these weeks, adding social buttons etc. The problem is that from some point late last week thurs/fri my pages started disappearing from Googles index. I have checked webmaster tools and have no manual actions. My link profile is pretty clean as its a new site, and i have manually checked every piece of content published for plagiarism etc. So what is going on? Did i break my blog? Or is something else amiss? Impressions are down 96% comparing Nov 1-5th to previous 5 days. site is here: http://bit.ly/174beVm Thanks for any help in advance.
Technical SEO | | Silkstream0 -
Google webmaster showing 0 indexed, yet I can see them all them Google search?
I can see them all the pages showing up in Google when i search for my site. But in webmaster tools under the sitemaps section in the indexed pages - the red bar is showing 0 indexed pages, even though they seem to be indexed. Any idea why is this showing like this? I don’t really think it’s that important as the pages are still indexed, but it just seems odd. Please see in the image.
Technical SEO | | Perfect0070 -
WordPress post indexation speed
Has anyone noticed any increases in the length of time it takes for WP posts to get indexed by Google? I have a website with the following: domain.com - CMS with lots of pages/content blog.domain.com - subdomain for the blog using WP It's odd.. the pages on the main site are indexed almost immediately. The posts on the blog are taking between 2-5 days. The blog posts are all unique content, here's an example of a recent one: blog.looksfishy.co.uk/2013/three-rivers-angling/
Technical SEO | | edwardlewis0 -
Index page
To the SEO experts, this may well seem a silly question, so I apologies in advance as I try not to ask questions that I probably know the answer for already, but clarity is my goal I have numerous sites ,as standard practice, through the .htaccess I will always set up non www to www, and redirect the index page to www.mysite.com. All straight forward, have never questioned this practice, always been advised its the ebst practice to avoid duplicate content. Now, today, I was looking at a CMS service for a customer for their website, the website is already built and its a static website, so the CMS integration was going to mean a full rewrite of the website. Speaking to a friend on another forum, he told me about a service called simple CMS, had a look, looks perfect for the customer ... Went to set it up on the clients site and here is the problem. For the CMS software to work, it MUST access the index page, because my index page is redirected to www.mysite.com , it wont work as it cant find the index page (obviously) I questioned this with the software company, they inform me that it must access the index page, I have explained that it wont be able to and why (cause I have my index page redirected to avoid duplicate content) To my astonishment, the person there told me that duplicate content is a huge no no with Google (that's not the astonishing part) but its not relevant to the index and non index page of a website. This goes against everything I thought I knew ... The person also reassured me that they have worked within the SEO area for 10 years. As I am a subscriber to SEO MOZ and no one here has anything to gain but offering advice, is this true ? Will it not be an issue for duplicate content to show both a index page and non index page ?, will search engines not view this as duplicate content ? Or is this SEO expert talking bull, which I suspect, but cannot be sure. Any advice would be greatly appreciated, it would make my life a lot easier for the customer to use this CMS software, but I would do it at the risk of tarnishing the work they and I have done on their ranking status Many thanks in advance John
Technical SEO | | Johnny4B0 -
Root vs. Index.html
Should I redirect index.html to "/" or vice versa? Which is better for duplicate content issues?
Technical SEO | | DavetheExterminator0