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jack_fox

What the Heck are Fraggles? Mobile-First Indexing Enables New SERPs - 0 views

  • Fraggles are a combination of ‘Fragments’ and ‘Handles’ that rank in Google search results. When clicked, Fraggles scroll directly to a specific section of an article, forum or webpage. What is important about this, when it happens, is that multiple answer fragments on a page are being indexed and ranked separately in Google, as part of a larger result – usually in a carousel of potential answers,
  • So far, they are almost always in the format of a quick fact or an answer to a question.
  • Now, Google appears to be indexing multiple pieces of content on a page separately, caching the most important information as a Fraggle, so that it can be shown in a carousel of other Fraggles, or ultimately, possibly so that it can be promoted quickly to an Answer in position-zero.
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  • In the short term, it seems like the best way to get Fraggles is to optimize for Featured Snippets, but also include JumpLinks and H2’s or H3’s in the code
  • It might also be useful to consistently code the optimized elements with the same heading tags, and DIV structure, and have a great Schema implementation
  • In the long run, we also think that the best way to optimize for Fraggles is by using Speakable Schema which is meant to help Google with voice search results. This especially includes marking up FAQ, Q&A and How To content, since these formats are most easily parsed and passed into a useful voice search result. Beyond this, it will probably help to add jump links to the different, speakable aspects of a page.
Rob Laporte

AMP Definition - SEO Glossary | Searchmetrics - 0 views

  • Open Source framework designed to speed up load times for mobile internet users
  • Characteristic features of AMP are reduced JavaScript and CSS elements, and the use of a Content Delivery Network
  • With the help of the right plugins, WordPress users can also publish over AMP, though there is not yet an eCommerce solution for AMP.
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  • There are a number of specific features a website’s HTML has to have in order for it to run over AMP. Any audiovisual media content has to be marked with special AMP tags
  • Besides AMP, there are other mobile optimization strategies, including Responsive Web Design, or the use of separate mobile URLs with Progressive Web Apps.
jack_fox

Understand how structured data works  |  Search  |  Google Developers - 0 views

  • You should not create blank or empty pages just to hold structured data; nor should you add structured data about information that is not visible to the user, even if the information is accurate.
  • JavaScript notation embedded in a <script> tag in the page head or body.
Rob Laporte

What Do Google's New, Longer Snippets Mean for SEO? - Whiteboard Friday - Moz - 0 views

  • So Google's had historic guidelines that said, well, you want to keep your meta description tag between about 160 and 180 characters. I think that was the number. They've updated that to where they say there's no official meta description recommended length. But on Twitter, Danny Sullivan said that he would probably not make that greater than 320 characters. In fact, we and other data providers, that collect a lot of search results, didn't find many that extended beyond 300. So I think that's a reasonable thing.
  • Now it's sitting at about 51% of search results that have these longer snippets in at least 1 of the top 10 as of December 2nd.
jack_fox

Google Warns About Instagram Embeds & Indexing - 0 views

  • Instagram on the embeds use a no index robots meta tag
jack_fox

Google Shortens Title Length In Search By 5 Characters On Average - 0 views

  • Google title length is purely dynamic and can show at different lengths based on tons of factors. But on average, it seems the average length of the title has dropped by almost five-characters.
jack_fox

Does Optimizing Content for "Near Me" Work for Local SEO? Sterling Sky Blog - 0 views

  • adding instances of “near you”, “nearby” and “near me” to the content of a page (including meta tags) does have a positive impact on ranking.
  • this optimization has a much more drastic positive impact on organic ranking and traffic for “near me” terms than it does for local ranking and traffic from the 3-pack.
jack_fox

Google categorizes what organic search traffic drops look like - 0 views

  • With technical issues that are on a page by page basis or an algorithm change like a core update, you would see a slower decline in your traffic, and it would then level off over tim
  • Google has been known to have reporting glitches in Search Console, where you see things bounce back to where they are
  • Note that the issues can be site-wide (for example, your website is down) or page-wide (for example, a misplaced noindex tag,
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  • Sometimes changes in user behavior will change the demand for certain queries, either as a result of a new trend, or seasonality throughout the year. This means your traffic may drop simply as a result of external influences.
jack_fox

Sitemaps & SEO: Are Sitemaps Still Important for SEO in 2019? - 0 views

  • <loc> and <lastmod>. These two tags are very important, so make sure you add them to your sitemap!
  • You can differentiate via the user agent and show an HTML sitemap instead if a real person visits the page.   Yoast SEO already does this. Visiting a /sitemap_index.xml file on a WordPress website will return an HTML sitemap, while hitting CTRL + U to view the source will return the actual XML sitemap.
  • Google limits that to only 10MB so make sure your file doesn’t have more than 50,000 URLs and 10MB
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  • if you have an entire section of your website full with videos, then you might consider splitting them into a separate sitemap
Rob Laporte

Google's New Snippet Controls Rolling Out In A Few Days With More Changes To Google France - 0 views

  • Here are the new controls:"nosnippet"This is an existing option to specify that you don't want any textual snippet shown for this page.  "max-snippet:[number]"New! Specify a maximum text-length, in characters, of a snippet for your page. "max-video-preview:[number]"New! Specify a maximum duration in seconds of an animated video preview. "max-image-preview:[setting]"New! Specify a maximum size of image preview to be shown for images on this page, using either "none", "standard", or "large".You can use this as standalone meta tags or combine them, so you can use something like this:There is also a new data-nosnippet HTML attribute for this that looks like this:We've seen samples of Google not showing anything but the URL in search, we assumed it was a bug. But probably it was Google testing this. Google did send out emails to publishers who would be impacted by this French law.Anyway, you should see the new snippet controls and French change starting Friday and as it rolls out through next week.
jack_fox

Google featured snippets: A short guide for 2019 - Search Engine Watch Search Engine Watch - 0 views

  • If your image has related text of the search query, it may appear in the featured snippet.
  • The featured snippet image can come from YouTube videos, too.
  • If your site is not mobile friendly, it will be hard for you to get a place in the featured snippet.
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  • To rank for a list snippet, a step by step guide content is most suitable. Use H2/H3 subheading tags for every step name
jack_fox

How to Find Your WordPress Page ID and Post ID: A Step by Step Guide - 0 views

  • Every piece of content on your WordPress site has an individual ID number. This includes pages and posts, as well as media files, comments, categories, tags, users, and more. These ID numbers help to organize content within your site’s database, and enable you to find, query, and target particular content.
Rob Laporte

SEO Starter Guide: The Basics | Google Search Central - 0 views

  • To tell Google not to follow or pass your page's reputation to the pages linked, set the value of the rel attribute of a link to nofollow or ugc. Nofollowing a link means adding rel="nofollow" or a more specific attribute such as ugc inside the link's anchor tag, as shown here:
  • Use the HTML <img> or <picture> elements
Rob Laporte

How to Optimize for Google's Featured Snippets to Build More Traffic - Moz - 1 views

  • Multiple studies confirm that the majority of featured snippets are triggered by long-tail keywords. In fact, the more words that are typed into a search box, the higher the probability there will be a featured snippet.
  • To avoid confusion, let's stick to the "featured snippet" term whenever there's a URL featured in the box, because these present an extra exposure to the linked site (hence they're important for content publishers):
  • It helps if you use a keyword research tool that shows immediately whether a query triggers featured results. SE Ranking offers a nice filter allowing you to see keywords that are currently triggering featured snippets:
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  • Tools like Buzzsumo and Text Optimizer can give you a good insight into questions people tend to ask around your topic:
  • Note that Search Console labels featured snippet positions as #1 (SEO used to call them position 0). So when you see #1 in Google Search Console, there’s nothing to do here. Focus on #2 and lower.
  • MyBlogU (disclaimer: I am the founder) is a great way to do that. Just post a new project in the " Brainstorm" section and ask members to contribute their thoughts.
  • 1. Aim at answering each question concisely My own observation of answer boxes has led me to think that Google prefers to feature an answer which was given within one paragraph. An older study by AJ Ghergich cites that the average length of a paragraph snippet is 45 words (the maximum is 97 words), so let it be your guideline as to how long each answer should be in order to get featured. This doesn't mean your articles need to be one paragraph long. On the contrary, these days Google seems to give preference to long-form content (also known as " cornerstone content," which is obviously a better way to describe it because it's not just about length) that's broken into logical subsections and features attention-grabbing images.  Even if you don’t believe that cornerstone content receives any special treatment in SERPs, focusing on long articles will help you to cover more related questions within one piece (more on that below). All you need to do is to adjust your blogging style just a bit: Ask the question in your article (that may be a subheading)Immediately follow the question with a one-paragraph answerElaborate further in the article
  • 2. Be factual and organize well Google loves numbers, steps and lists. We've seen this again and again: More often than not, answer boxes will list the actual ingredients, number of steps, time to cook, year and city of birth, etc. Use Google’s guide on writing meta descriptions to get a good idea what kind of summaries and answers they are looking to generate snippets (including featured snippets). Google loves well-structured, factual, and number-driven content. There's no specific markup to structure your content. Google seems to pick up <table>, <ol>, and <ul> well and doesn't need any other pointers. Using H2 and H3 subheadings will make your content easier to understand for both Google and your readers. 3. Make sure one article answers many related questions Google is very good at determining synonymic and closely related questions, so should be you. There's no point in creating a separate page answering each specific question. Creating one solid article addressing many related questions is a much smarter strategy if you aim at getting featured in answer boxes. This leads us to the next tactic: 4. Organize your questions properly To combine many closely related questions in one article, you need to organize your queries properly. This will also help you structure your content well. I have a multi-level keyword organization strategy that can be applied here as well: A generic keyword makes a section or a category of the blogA more specific search query becomes the title of the articleEven more specific queries determine the subheadings of the article and thus define its structureThere will be multiple queries that are so closely related that they will all go under a single subheading For example: Serpstat helps me a lot when it comes to both discovering an article idea and then breaking it into subtopics. Check out its " Questions" section. It will provide hundreds of questions containing your core term and then generate a tag cloud of other popular terms that come up in those questions:
  • 5. Make sure to use eye-grabbing images
  • How about structured markup? Many people would suggest using Schema.org (simply because it's been a "thing" to recommend adding schema for anything and everything) but the aforementioned Ahrefs study shows that there's no correlation between featured results and structured markup.
  •  
    "Organize your questions properly"
Rob Laporte

Get on Discover | Google Search Central  |  Documentation  |  Google Developers - 0 views

  • Content is automatically eligible to appear in Discover if it is indexed by Google and meets Discover's content policies. No special tags or structured data are required.
  • Monitor your performance on Discover
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