Hi Kevin,
When you mention "a disaster of a website that consumed 3/4 of a year" are you referring to a site redesign? If so can you provide a little more info?
Thanks,
Matt
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Hi Kevin,
When you mention "a disaster of a website that consumed 3/4 of a year" are you referring to a site redesign? If so can you provide a little more info?
Thanks,
Matt
Hi Kelly,
If the content of your website supports the use of structured data, it would definitely be in your best interest to use it.
A great introduction to structured data can be found here: https://developers.google.com/search/docs/guides/intro-structured-data
On the left hand menu of that page, click on "Feature Guides" and you can see examples of different content types and how structured data can be used to enhance your visibility in the SERPs. Each content type will also give you some example code of his this can be implemented.
Hope this helps!
Matt
Hi,
Launching a new website on your domain can be challenging, especially from an SEO perspective. There are a lot of things that need to be "ticked off" before you press the launch button. I understand that your new website is already live, so I'll adjust my recommendations below based on that to try and help:
Hope this helps!
Thanks
Matt
Hi,
In Example 1, each page should use self referencing canonical tags in addition to pagination tags.So for example:
URL: http://urbania.pe/buscar/venta-de-propiedades
**URL: http://urbania.pe/buscar/venta-de-propiedades?&page=2 **
<link rel="canonical" href="http: urbania.pe="" buscar="" venta-de-propiedades?&page="2""></link rel="canonical" href="http:>
And so on.....
In Example 2, for pages with pagination + filtering, canonical tags should point to the the relevant page of results without filtering. So for example:
URL: http://urbania.pe/buscar/venta-de-propiedades?bathroomsNumber=2&services=gas&commonAreas=solarium
<link rel="canonical" href="http: urbania.pe="" buscar="" venta-de-propiedades"=""></link rel="canonical" href="http:>
URL: http://urbania.pe/buscar/venta-de-propiedades?bathroomsNumber=2&services=gas&commonAreas=solarium&page=2
<link rel="canonical" href="http: urbania.pe="" buscar="" venta-de-propiedades?&page="2""></link rel="canonical" href="http:>
Hope this isnt too confusing
Thanks,
Matt
Hello,
I would say this is a duplicate content issue.
Identical versions of the PDF are found on both the sweetwater.com domain and also americanmusical.com:
https://media.sweetwater.com/store/pdf/Nord_cashback_20170531.pdf
https://www.americanmusical.com/ItemFiles/Rebate/NordStage2EX_05312017.pdf
If you perform an "info:" search on your URL you will notice that Google returns the document from sweetwater.com:
info:https://www.americanmusical.com/ItemFiles/Rebate/NordStage2EX_05312017.pdf
Hi Jared,
I've had a look at the video you mentioned and it looks like YouTube doesn't use meta description tags for user uploaded videos. So Google is simply crawling the contents of the page and pulling the meta description from the surrounding text. In this case the title of a competitors "related video" on the right hand side is being used. Your best bet would be to use a video description (as you have done), but there is not a lot else you can do unfortunately.
Cheers,
Matthew
Hi Lev,
I have seen cases like this before where Google automatically appends your business name to the Meta Tile Tag you have specified. From my experience, this is only done by Google when there is enough space to do so without impacting the Title Tag you have written for the page.
So if there is blank space available at the end, Google may append your business name to the title.If you have specified a Title Tag that does not leave Google enough space to append the business name, they will not include it.
So in your example, feel free to write Title Tags that make use of all the available space.
P.S. Google limits title tags by width (600 pixels), not characters.