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    4. Canonical and Alternate Advice

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    Canonical and Alternate Advice

    Intermediate & Advanced SEO
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    • JH_OffLimits
      JH_OffLimits Subscriber last edited by

      At the moment for most of our sites, we have both a desktop and mobile version of our sites. They both show the same content and use the same URL structure as each other. The server determines whether if you're visiting from either device and displays the relevant version of the site.

      We are in a predicament of how to properly use the canonical and alternate rel tags. Currently we have a canonical on mobile and alternate on desktop, both of which have the same URL because both mobile and desktop use the same as explained in the first paragraph.

      Would the way of us doing it at the moment be correct?

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • BlueprintMarketing
        BlueprintMarketing @Nigel_Carr last edited by

        That would normally be the case but not tonight.

        LOL, I am picking up a lot of the UK Q&A I will be at BrightonSEO and search love London if any of you guys will be in the area I'd love to grab a pint?

        sincerely,

        Thomas

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • Nigel_Carr
          Nigel_Carr @BlueprintMarketing last edited by

          The reason we answered 'quickly' by the way is because we are in the UK -  you were still in bed lol! 🙂

          BlueprintMarketing 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • Nigel_Carr
            Nigel_Carr @JH_OffLimits last edited by

            There is only ONE URL that is the point.

            If they share the same URL then you only have one page of code so ONE canonical

            Regards

            Nigel

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • BlueprintMarketing
              BlueprintMarketing @Nigel_Carr last edited by

              Sorry Nigel

              was not trying to make this more complicated was just trying to make sure that we were all on the same page.

              FYI if you need a method of adding the rel canonical to your website quickly you can use Google tag manager or if you want to add to the header

              https://support.stackpath.com/hc/en-us/articles/360001445283-EdgeRules-Adding-a-Canonical-Header

              Nigel_Carr 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • JH_OffLimits
                JH_OffLimits Subscriber @BlueprintMarketing last edited by

                So a self referencing canonical on both mobile and desktop versions of the site, regardless if they chuck out two version with the same content?

                Nigel_Carr 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • Nigel_Carr
                  Nigel_Carr @JH_OffLimits last edited by

                  Hi JH

                  I'm sure Thomas means well with his multiple complicated posts but all of this is totally unnecessary.

                  Both sites are serving the same URL

                  You can't put a rel=alternative because there is nothing to point to.

                  Just put a self-referencing canonical. I said that 2 hours ago!

                  That is all.

                  Regards Nigel

                  BlueprintMarketing 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • BlueprintMarketing
                    BlueprintMarketing @JH_OffLimits last edited by

                    Use a self-referencing canonical

                    https://blog.seoprofiler.com/google-recommend-self-referencing-canonical-tags/

                    Please let me know if you want me to remove the image below?

                    you can use this one if needed http://bseo.io/c1vMSv

                    mgkic5E.png

                    JH_OffLimits 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • JH_OffLimits
                      JH_OffLimits Subscriber @BlueprintMarketing last edited by

                      I've been told to pass on a URL, thanks for your help Thomas!

                      https://www.stag.com/

                      BlueprintMarketing Nigel_Carr 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • BlueprintMarketing
                        BlueprintMarketing @JH_OffLimits last edited by

                        Hey man I understand is a big deal

                        could you do me a huge favor and run your site through screaming frog SEO spider send me a couple of pages with the domains whited out so I can tell you 100% what to do in this situation because I am basing this on what you have told me and honestly I would like to look at what a tool can show me and that will tell me what I need to do.

                        Or you can tell me if the mobile version of the site hit's Google's index yes or no?

                        respectfully,

                        Tom

                        JH_OffLimits 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • JH_OffLimits
                          JH_OffLimits Subscriber @BlueprintMarketing last edited by

                          So both mobile and desktop require a self referencing canonical(in both headers)?

                          Sorry for the questions, just need to make sure! It's a very touchy subject!

                          BlueprintMarketing 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • BlueprintMarketing
                            BlueprintMarketing @BlueprintMarketing last edited by

                            The single self-referencing URL will work.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • BlueprintMarketing
                              BlueprintMarketing @JH_OffLimits last edited by

                              What URLs are you  using with the “alternate” tag on?

                              You said 
                              ”1. We have multiple brand sites, that have a similar setup. They all have mobile and desktop versions of the sites running on the same URL, both of which show the same content.

                              2. The server determines whether if you're on a desktop or mobile devices using the header information, and points the user to the site relevant files for the given device.”

                              thats Dynamic serving same URL

                              Dynamic serving is a setup where the server responds with different HTML (and CSS) on the same URL depending on which user agent requests the page (mobile, tablet, or desktop).

                              that would NOT give you the mobile or m.example.com & www.example.com different URLs

                              **But If you do have  a different  m.example.com & www.example.com  URLs you should use this code or  XML site maps **

                              for different URLs use this:

                              Annotations in the HTML

                              On the desktop page (http://www.example.com/page-1), add the following annotation:

                              <linkrel="alternate"media="only screen="" and="" (max-width:="" 640px)"<="" span="">href="http://m.example.com/page-1"></linkrel="alternate"media="only>

                              On the mobile page (http://m.example.com/page-1), the required annotation should be:

                              <linkrel="canonical"href="http: www.example.com="" page-1"=""></linkrel="canonical"href="http:>

                              This rel="canonical" tag on the mobile URL pointing to the desktop page is required.

                              Or

                              Annotations in sitemaps

                              We support including the rel="alternate"annotation for the desktop pages in sitemaps like this:

                              <urlsetxmlns="http: www.sitemaps.org="" schemas="" sitemap="" 0.9"<="" span="">xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">

                              <loc>http://www.example.com/page-1/</loc>
                              <xhtml:linkrel="alternate"media="only screen="" and="" (max-width:="" 640px)"<="" span="">href="http://m.example.com/page-1"/></xhtml:linkrel="alternate"media="only></urlsetxmlns="http:>

                              You should have the same URL on mobile and desktop

                              You should have the same rel canonical tag on your URLs unless and this is a big unless you're talking about using Google AMP?

                              If the URL you want to be indexed is the same URL point everything to that URL if that makes it easier to understand.

                              respectfully,

                              Tom

                              BlueprintMarketing JH_OffLimits 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • JH_OffLimits
                                JH_OffLimits Subscriber @BlueprintMarketing last edited by

                                Just to confirm, are we suppose to have a canonical on desktop and mobile or just desktop?

                                This would mean removing the alternate?

                                Want to confirm everything before iterating this across to others.

                                We are not using AMP, just a standard site setup.

                                BlueprintMarketing 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • BlueprintMarketing
                                  BlueprintMarketing @BlueprintMarketing last edited by

                                  Unless you are using AMP?

                                  Then you would add

                                  Linking pages with

                                  In order to solve this problem, we add information about the AMP page to the non-AMP page and vice versa, in the form of  tags in the .

                                  Add the following to the non-AMP page:

                                  <link rel="amphtml" href="https://www.example.com/url/to/amp/document.html">
                                  
                                  

                                  And this to the AMP page:

                                  <link rel="canonical" href="https://www.example.com/url/to/full/document.html">
                                  

                                  are you using AMP pages?

                                  https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/139066?hl=en

                                  https://www.ampproject.org/docs/fundamentals/discovery

                                  I hope that helps you if not please let me know.

                                  Respectfully,

                                  Tom

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • BlueprintMarketing
                                    BlueprintMarketing @JH_OffLimits last edited by

                                    Cool, that's what I thought when I heard your description I just wanted to be very thorough because sometimes you get very little information and I appreciate you letting me know that.

                                    dynamic  serving URLs are identical to each other so you should have a self-referencing canonical tag because the URL does not change the real canonical tag just decides what should be in the index and the same URL.

                                    You're Rel canonical should be something like this example below

                                    Example URL https://www.example.com/example-url/

                                    because the end URL is the same and URL that you want to be indexed in Google you want to be certain that you have a self-referencing URL to prevent query strings and other things like that and you do not need to point a URL to an identical URL you just need a self-referencing canonical if that makes sense.

                                    See: https://yoast.com/rel-canonical/

                                    I hope that is of help,

                                    Tom

                                    BlueprintMarketing JH_OffLimits 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • JH_OffLimits
                                      JH_OffLimits Subscriber @BlueprintMarketing last edited by

                                      Hi,

                                      I can't give off too much information as it's not my call, but I can answer your questions without mentioning the brands.

                                      1. We have multiple brand sites, that have a similar setup. They all have mobile and desktop versions of the sites running on the same URL, both of which show the same content.

                                      2. The server determines whether if you're on a desktop or mobile devices using the header information, and points the user to the site relevant files for the given device.

                                      3. Our sites would quite clearly fit in the dynamic serving category.

                                      We have 301 redirects on none www to www and http to https.

                                      BlueprintMarketing 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • effectdigital
                                        effectdigital @Nigel_Carr last edited by

                                        This is the correct solution!

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • Nigel_Carr
                                          Nigel_Carr @JH_OffLimits last edited by

                                          The URLs are identical it is just the content that is served that may be slightly different.

                                          Since you can only specify one canonical for each URL it makes no difference. Just self-reference and that is it.

                                          If you had to different URLs then it would be an issue where you woudl need a rel=alternative so there is nothing to worry about.

                                          Regards

                                          Nigel

                                          effectdigital 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                          • BlueprintMarketing
                                            BlueprintMarketing last edited by

                                            You guys are fast I was going to answer this and had to do some other things but let me weigh in on couple things.

                                            as you said

                                            “We are in a predicament of how to properly use the canonical and alternate rel tags**. Currently we have a canonical on mobile and alternate on desktop, both of which have the same URL because both mobile and desktop use the same as explained in the first paragraph.”**

                                            so what you’re saying is that you have a dynamic site so you don’t need to add “alternate"media” tags to the site.

                                            https://developers.google.com/search/mobile-sites/mobile-seo/dynamic-serving

                                            As it is not immediately apparent in this setup that the site alters the HTML for mobile user agents (the mobile content is "hidden" when crawled with a desktop user agent), it’s  recommend that the server send a hint to request that Googlebot for smartphones also crawl the page, and thus discover the mobile content. This hint is implemented using the Vary HTTP header.

                                            **you don’t need this **

                                            Annotations in the HTML

                                            On the desktop page (http://www.example.com/page-1), add the following annotation:

                                            <code dir="ltr"><linkrel="alternate"media="only screen="" and="" (max-width:="" 640px)"<br="">href="http://m.example.com/page-1"></linkrel="alternate"media="only></code> 
                                            

                                            On the mobile page (http://m.example.com/page-1), the required annotation should be:

                                             <code dir="ltr"><linkrel="canonical"href="http: www.example.com="" page-1"=""></linkrel="canonical"href="http:></code> 
                                            

                                            This rel="canonical" tag on the mobile URL pointing to the desktop page is required.

                                            Annotations in sitemaps

                                            We support including the rel="alternate"annotation for the desktop pages in sitemaps like this:

                                             <code dir="ltr"><urlsetxmlns="http: www.sitemaps.org="" schemas="" sitemap="" 0.9"<br="">xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
                                              <url><loc>http://www.example.com/page-1/</loc>
                                                <xhtml:linkrel="alternate"media="only screen="" and="" (max-width:="" 640px)"<br="">href="http://m.example.com/page-1"/></xhtml:linkrel="alternate"media="only></url></urlsetxmlns="http:></code> 
                                            

                                            The required rel="canonical" tag on the mobile URL should still be added to the mobile page's HTML.

                                            **to be sure **

                                            Are you willing to share your domain with us? Or one domain?

                                            1. We're talking about multiple websites that all have the identical site structure or at least mobile and desktop site structure?

                                            2. Your server is making the change for you?

                                            3. Would you be kind enough to install this plug-in on chrome in order for you to show a couple examples of the canonical and the URL?

                                            • https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/portents-seo-page-review/babgchcegnkbiojmdpnoilficladccfm?hl=en-US
                                            • https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/link-redirect-trace/nnpljppamoaalgkieeciijbcccohlpoh?hl=en

                                            In addition, would you be kind enough to run your site through the two tools here ( 100% free and very easy to use)

                                            • https://varvy.com/mobile/
                                            • https://varvy.com/
                                            • &
                                            • https://redbot.org/

                                            If you would not mind doing this and sending screenshots it would mean a lot to us and getting your canonical's straightened out.

                                            screenshots https://snag.gy/  then upload to http://imgur.com/

                                            everything is on the same server I'm assuming?

                                            Of the three below how would you categorize your site?

                                            1. https://developers.google.com/search/mobile-sites/mobile-seo/separate-urls
                                            2. https://developers.google.com/search/mobile-sites/mobile-seo/dynamic-serving
                                            3. https://developers.google.com/search/mobile-sites/mobile-seo/responsive-design

                                            Respectfully,

                                            Tom

                                            JH_OffLimits 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                            • JH_OffLimits
                                              JH_OffLimits Subscriber @Nigel_Carr last edited by

                                              Would this mean we need canonical only on desktop or mobile site?

                                              Nigel_Carr 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                              • Nigel_Carr
                                                Nigel_Carr @effectdigital last edited by

                                                You are right - you could only use teh rel=alternate if there was an m. version or similar

                                                Regards

                                                Nigel

                                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                                • effectdigital
                                                  effectdigital @Nigel_Carr last edited by

                                                  The self referencing canonical advice was solid and I 100% agree with it. The rel=alternate advice, I felt would cause problems (IMO). But as we all know, fiddly issues like this are highly subjective

                                                  Nigel_Carr 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                                  • Nigel_Carr
                                                    Nigel_Carr @effectdigital last edited by

                                                    Then there is no problem simply putting a self-referencing canonical. There is in effect no mobile version as there is a single URL so no need for a rel=alternate.

                                                    It's an even easier solution. Well, there isn't a problem in the first place.

                                                    rel=alternate is only necessary if you have two different URLs! The fact they are the same takes away the problem.

                                                    Regards

                                                    Nigel

                                                    effectdigital JH_OffLimits 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                                    • effectdigital
                                                      effectdigital last edited by

                                                      Your problem is that you have two different sites loading on the same URL. If you are returning both the mobile and desktop / laptop site on the same URL, you would be expected to be using responsive design. In-fact, you may have re-invented another different way to implement responsive design which is probably, slightly less fluid yet slightly more efficient :')

                                                      Since your mobile and desktop pages both reside on exactly the same URL, I'd test the page(s) with this tool (the mobile friendly tool) and this tool (the page-speed insights tool). If Google correctly views your site as mobile friendly, and if within PageSpeed insights Google is correctly differentiating between the mobile and desktop site versions (check the mobile and desktop tabs) then both URLs should canonical to themselves (self referencing canonical) and no alternate tag should be used or deployed. Google will misread the alternate tag, which points to itself - as an error. That tag is to be used when your separate mobile site (page) exists on a separate URL, like an 'm.' subdomain or something like that

                                                      Imagine you are Googlebot. You are crawling in desktop mode, load the desktop URL version and find that the page says, it (itself) is also the mobile page. You'd get really confused

                                                      Check to see whether your implementation is even supported by Google using the tools I linked you to. If it is, then just use self referencing canonical tags and do not deploy alternate tags (which would make no sense, since both versions of the site are on the same URL). When people build responsive sites (same source code on the same URL, but it's adaptive CSS which re-organises the contents of the page based upon viewport widths) - they don't use alternate tags, only canonicals

                                                      Since your situation is more similar to responsive design (from a crawling perspective) than it is to separate mobile site design, drop the alt

                                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                                      • effectdigital
                                                        effectdigital @Nigel_Carr last edited by

                                                        The problem with this is, where you say "corresponding mobile URL" - there isn't one as OP has stated that, two different source codes  (pages) can be rendered on the same URL depending upon the user's screen size / user-agent (however they are detecting mobile, and serving different pages)

                                                        Nigel_Carr 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                                        • Nigel_Carr
                                                          Nigel_Carr last edited by

                                                          Hi JH

                                                          This is very straightforward.

                                                          Use the following annotations:

                                                          1. On the desktop page, add a  rel=”alternate” tag pointing to the corresponding mobile URL. This helps Googlebot discover the location of your site’s mobile pages.
                                                          2. On the mobile page, add a link rel=”canonical” tag pointing to the corresponding desktop URL.

                                                          It is that simple and doing this will not create duplicate content

                                                          More here: https://developers.google.com/search/mobile-sites/mobile-seo/separate-urls

                                                          Regards Nigel

                                                          effectdigital 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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                                                          • ABK717

                                                            Is a 301 Redirect and a Canonical Tag on Uppercase to Lowercase Pages Correct?

                                                            We have a medium size site that lost more than 50% of its traffic in July 2013 just before the Panda rollout. After working with a SEO agency, we were advised to clean up various items, one of them being that the 10k+ urls were all mixed case (i.e. www.example.com/Blue-Widget). A 301 redirect was set up thereafter forcing all these urls to go to a lowercase version (i.e. www.example.com/blue-widget). In addition, there was a canonical tag placed on all of these pages in case any parameters or other characters were incorporated into a url. I thought this was a good set up, but when running a SEO audit through a third party tool, it shows me the massive amount of 301 redirects. And, now I wonder if there should only be a canonical without the redirect or if its okay to have tens of thousands 301 redirects on the site. We have not recovered yet from the traffic loss yet and we are wondering if its really more of a technical problem than a Google penalty. Guidance and advise from those experienced in the industry is appreciated.

                                                            Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | ABK717
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                                                          • partnerf

                                                            Canonical tag - but Title and Description are slightly different

                                                            I am building a new SEO site with a "Silo" / Themed architecture.  I have a travel website selling hotel reservations.  I list a hotel page under a city page - example, www.abc.com/Dallas/Hilton.html   Then I use that same property under a segment within the city - example www.abc.com/Dallas/Downtown/Hilton.html, so there are two URLs with the same content Both pages are identical, except I want to customize the Title and Description.  I want to customize the title and description to build a consistent theme - for example the /Downtown/Hilton page will have the words "Near Downtown" in the Title and Description, while the primary city Hilton page will not.  So I have two questions about this. First, is it okay to use a canonical tag if the Title and Description are slightly different?  Everything else is identical. If so, will Google crawl and comprehend the unique Title and Description on the "Downtown" silo? I want Google to see that I have several "supporting" pages to my main landing page(s).  I want to present to Google 5 supporting pages in each silo that each has a supporting keyword theme.  But I'm not sure if Google will consider content of pages that point to a different page using the canonical tag. Please see this supporting example:  http://d.pr/i/aQPv Thanks for your insights. Rob

                                                            Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | partnerf
                                                            0
                                                          • Jellyfish-Agency

                                                            Rel=canonical tag on original page?

                                                            Afternoon All,
                                                            We are using Concrete5 as our CMS system, we are due to change but for the moment we have to play with what we have got. Part of the C5 system allows us to attribute our main page into other categories, via a page alaiser add-on. But what it also does is create several url paths and duplicate pages depending on how many times we take the original page and reference it in other categories. We have tried C5 canonical/SEO add-on's but they all seem to fall short. We have tried to address this issue in the most efficient way possible by using the rel=canonical tag. The only issue is the limitations of our cms system. We add the canonical tag to the original page header and this will automatically place this tag on all the duplicate pages and in turn fix the problem of duplicate content. The only problem is the canonical tag is on the original page as well, but it is referencing itself, effectively creating a tagging circle. Does anyone foresee a problem with the canonical tag being on the original page but in turn referencing itself? What we have done is try to simplify our duplicate content issues. We have over 2500 duplicate page issues because of this aliasing add-on and want to automate the canonical tag addition, rather than go to each individual page and manually add this tag, so the original reference page can remain the original. We have implemented this tag on one page at the moment with 9 duplicate pages/url's and are monitoring, but was curious if people had experienced this before or had any thoughts?

                                                            Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Jellyfish-Agency
                                                            0

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