Post by account_disabled on Mar 6, 2024 4:51:52 GMT -5
The Crawl Day Where Do You Start Technical SEO Advanced SEO Read about the new upgrades weve added to Site Crawl as of September here When youre faced with the many thousands of potential issues a large site can have where do you start This is the question we tried to tackle when we rebuilt Site Crawl. The answer depends almost entirely on your site and can require deep knowledge of its history and goals but Id like to outline a process that can help you cut through the noise and get started.
Simplistic can be dangerous Previously we at Moz tried to label every Greece Mobile Number List issue as either high medium or low priority. This simplistic approach can be appealing even comforting and you may be wondering why we moved away from it. This was a very conscious decision and it boils down to a couple of problems. First prioritization depends a lot on your intent. Misinterpreting your intent can lead to bad advice that ranges from confusing to outright catastrophic. Lets say for example that we hired a brandnew SEO at Moz and they saw the following issue count pop up Almost NOINDEX tags WHAT ABOUT THE CHILDREN If that new SEO then rushed to remove those tags theyd be doing a lot of damage not realizing that the vast majority of those directives are intentional.
We can make our systems smarter but they cant read your mind so we want to be cautious about false alarms. Second bucketing issues by priority doesnt do much to help you understand the nature of those problems or how to go about fixing them. We now categorize Site Crawl issues into one of five descriptive types Critical Crawler Issues Crawler Warnings Redirect Issues Metadata Issues allows you to be more tactical. The issues in our new Redirect category for example are going to have much more in common which means they potentially have common fixes. Ultimately helping you find.
Simplistic can be dangerous Previously we at Moz tried to label every Greece Mobile Number List issue as either high medium or low priority. This simplistic approach can be appealing even comforting and you may be wondering why we moved away from it. This was a very conscious decision and it boils down to a couple of problems. First prioritization depends a lot on your intent. Misinterpreting your intent can lead to bad advice that ranges from confusing to outright catastrophic. Lets say for example that we hired a brandnew SEO at Moz and they saw the following issue count pop up Almost NOINDEX tags WHAT ABOUT THE CHILDREN If that new SEO then rushed to remove those tags theyd be doing a lot of damage not realizing that the vast majority of those directives are intentional.
We can make our systems smarter but they cant read your mind so we want to be cautious about false alarms. Second bucketing issues by priority doesnt do much to help you understand the nature of those problems or how to go about fixing them. We now categorize Site Crawl issues into one of five descriptive types Critical Crawler Issues Crawler Warnings Redirect Issues Metadata Issues allows you to be more tactical. The issues in our new Redirect category for example are going to have much more in common which means they potentially have common fixes. Ultimately helping you find.