SEO
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SEO Basics12 Topics|1 Quiz
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What is SEO
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Google Algorithm For SEO
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SEO Terms and Ranking Factors
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Types of Search Engine SEO Factors
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Content & Search Engine Success Factors
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Site Architecture & Search Engine Success Factors
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HTML Code & Search Engine Success Factors
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Trust, Authority & Search Rankings
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Link building & Ranking in Search Engines
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User Context Signals & Search Engine Rankings
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Toxins & Search Engine Spam Penalties
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Emerging Verticals in Search
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What is SEO
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Semantic Core12 Topics|1 Quiz
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What Is Semantic Core
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Selecting Semantic Keywords
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Commercial Keywords
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Keyword Frequency and Density
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Mid-Range Keywords
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Low-Frequency Keywords
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Low Competition Keywords
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Competitors Research
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Collect The Competitor`s Semantics
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Analyzing Semantic Core
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Keywords With Small Traffic
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Relevant Similar Keywords
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What Is Semantic Core
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Keywords Clustering14 Topics|1 Quiz
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What Are Keywords Clustering
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Lemma-Based Clustering and Serp-Based Clustering
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Keyword Research
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Competitors Keywords Analysis
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Find Keywords Ideas
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Cheсking Keywords Data
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Search Volume
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Search Intent
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Types Of Keyword Intent
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Research Intent
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LSI And Synonyms
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Cost-Per-Click
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The Relevance
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Segment Keywords Into Groups
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What Are Keywords Clustering
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Website Structure11 Topics|1 Quiz
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On-Page SEO55 Topics|1 Quiz
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What Is On-Page SEO
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Meta-Tags
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Content
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Text
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Structural Text Elements
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Graphics
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Videos
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Design
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URL Structure
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Internal Linking
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Internal Links And Structure
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Types Of Internal Links
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Navigational Links
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Contextual Links
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Puproses of Using Internal Links
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Internal Links Strategies
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Cornerstone Content and Internal Linking Features
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Internal Links Audit
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Software For Internal Linking
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Canonicalization
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What Is a Snippet
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Types of Snippets
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Rich And Regular Snippets
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Featured Snippets
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Translating Content to Structured Data
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What Is an SEO Title
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What Is A Meta Description
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How To Write Meta Description
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Tools For Checking Meta Descriptions
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How To Improve Your Title Tag
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How To Improve Your Meta Description
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Breadcrumbs Navigation
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What Is Anchor Text
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How Does Anchor Text Affect SEO
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Types Of Anchor Texts
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Anchor Text HTML
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How To Optimize Anchor Text For SEO
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How To Improve Your Anchor Link Texts
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What Is The Anchor Tag
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The Difference Between Hyperlink And Anchor Text
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Anchor Text Manipulation
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Anchor Text And Backlinks
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Image’s Alt Attribute
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How To Optimize Images
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The Image's Size
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Title Attribute
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The Caption
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The File Name
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How To Add Alt Text To Image
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Adding Alt Text Based On The Purpose Of The Image
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Tips For Writing Alt Tags
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Tools For Adding Alt Tags
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Yoast: Local, Video, News SEO
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Yoast SEO Content Functions
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WooCommerce SEO
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What Is On-Page SEO
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Technical SEO9 Topics|1 Quiz
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SEO Reporting38 Topics|1 Quiz
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SEO Audit
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What Is The Google Search Console
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What Is Google Search Console Used For
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The Main Sections Of The Google Search Console Interface
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What Are Impressions, Position, And Clicks
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CTR
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How To Use Google Search Console To Improve Your SEO
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Resource And Setting Management
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Site Settings Management
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Adding a Resource
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Deleting a Resource
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Linking And Unlinking Resources With Other Services
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Moving Site To Another URL
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Tracking Indicators
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Indexing Status
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AMP Status
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Rich Results Status
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Sitemap Status
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Basic Internet Metrics (LCP, FID, CLS)
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Page Speed
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Troubleshooting
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Why Is The Page Or Site Missing From Google
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Why Isn't My Rich Result Showing On Google Services
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Problems With Decreasing Traffic Volume
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Problems With The Deterioration Of Site Rankings
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Problems With Page Descriptions In Search Results
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Testing
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URL Inspection Tool
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Amp Test
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Signed Exchange Issues
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Mobile-Friendly Test Tool
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Rich Results Test
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Robots.Txt File Checker
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Scanning And Indexing
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Submitting A Request To Google To First Crawl Or Re-Crawl Your Page
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Temporarily Exclude Pages And Images From Google Search Results
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Submitting A Scan Request Or Rescanning
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Submitting Sitemaps And Tracking Their Status
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SEO Audit
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External SEO8 Topics|1 Quiz
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SEO Strategy2 Topics|1 Quiz
Participants 286
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HTML Code & Search Engine Success Factors
14.02.2022
These elements encompass the HTML tags that you should be using to send clues to search engines about your content and enable that content to render quickly.
Are you describing movie showtimes? Do you have ratings and reviews on your e-commerce pages? What’s the headline of the article you’ve published? In every case, there’s a way to communicate this with HTML.
Titles
HTML titles have always been and remain the most important HTML signal that search engines use to understand what a page is about. Your titles convey what your pages are about to users as well as search engines, so it’s important that they are unique and descriptive.
Titles are specified through the HTML title tag. This is typically what shows as the clickable link in a search result. Your titles should be concise, accurately reflect your page’s content and feature the keywords you wish to rank for — without keyword stuffing (a Toxin).
Pro Tip
In most cases, Google will use the title in the meta description for their snippets, but sometimes they don’t and we’re seeing that if they don’t like the title for one reason or another, they would pick the H1 instead.
A page can rank for a lot of different terms and when somebody’s searching for something, that title might not be a good fit. That’s the main driver for Google to be overriding what you do on the titles and the snippets — because the snippet that is going to come up is not going to be a great match for this specific query.
That’s why the idea of ‘Oh, you have to have exactly the same title as the H1,’ makes no sense. It’s better to have them different so that you’re giving Google a better backup. So, when users search, Google can use the title, but if they’re searching for secondary terms — because a page can rank for hundreds of keywords — they can use the H1 as a backup.
Descriptions
The meta description tag is an HTML element that can be used to suggest how you’d like your pages to be described in the search listings. Descriptions to appear below the headlines in the search results.
Although it is not technically a ranking factor, it’s a “success” factor. Adding a well-crafted description can help entice users to click your result over the others on the page.
Meta descriptions that contain the keywords searched for may appear in bold.
As with titles, the search engines may not always pick the description you provide.
In case your title and description, as written in your meta tag, are not 100% accurate of what your page is about, then that’s when the system is going to look very closely at other parts of your document and going to extract a caption that it thinks is more relevant.
Structure
Structured data gives search engines a better understanding of the content on your page. For users, it enhances the listing to give them more insight into what’s available on that page. From a brand perspective, it gives eye candy.
Structured data is a code format that lets you tell the search engines what your content is about in their one “language.” Specific schema markup (code) can make it easy for search engines to digest and understand the page content and structure.
The result of structured data often translates into what Google calls a “rich snippet,” a search listing that has extra bells and whistles that make it more attractive and useful to users.
Structured data is tremendous for search results, because your result can be filled with rich media, images, pricing information, ratings and so on — and in a carousel versus just the blue link.
Compared to standard search results, rich results offer additional information or functionality that may be more attractive or useful to users.
Rich results often appear prominently on the results page, which can increase brand awareness and drive traffic to your content.
There is concern that rich results eliminate the incentive for users to click through to your page, which limits marketing opportunities. All other factors being equal, a rich result is still more likely to get clicks than a standard result.
Headings
Headings are a hierarchical way to organize and identify key sections of your content. A page will typically have a headline. Behind the scenes, in the HTML code, the headline is wrapped in an H1 tag. This page has a headline and several sub-headings to break up the copy into sections. Those sub-headings use H2 tags, the next “level” down from H1 tags.
Wrapping your headings in header tags is what generates the special formatting.
For example, the name of this section, “Headings” is wrapped in an H2 HTML tag, as follows: <h2>Hd: Headings</h2>.
If you just put a blurb of text from start to finish, it’s going to be very difficult for the user to read and follow it. That’s what the purpose of headings are: to make sure that you can quickly scan the page, understand what it is about and even know whether you want to spend the time to read it completely.
Using multiple H1 tags (or none at all) is not going to trip up Google’s algorithms. Having clear, semantic headings is useful for search engines to understand pages and makes your content more accessible to users.
It is good practice to use keywords your H1s and H2s to give search engines a better idea of what your page is about. Do not spam your headings with keywords. Use them to make your content easy for users and search engines to navigate.
CLS: Content Shift
As Google has removed the AMP requirement, we’ve gotten rid of that element and added two new ones: Image ALT (ALT) and Content Shift (CLS). Content Shift (CLS) focuses on the elements of visual stability.
Cumulative Layout Shift, which is part of the Core Web Vitals and overall page experience update, refers to unexpected changes in a page’s layout as it loads.
“Have you ever been reading an article online when something suddenly changes on the page? Without warning, the text moves, and you’ve lost your place. Or even worse: you’re about to tap a link or a button, but in the instant before your finger lands—BOOM—the link moves, and you end up clicking something else! Most of the time these kinds of experiences are just annoying, but in some cases, they can cause real damage.
To provide the best user experience, Google recommends a CLS score of 0.1 or less.
ALT: Image ALT
Known by many names (ALT tags, image ALT, ALT descriptions, etc.), Image ALT text is HTML that describes what an image is and what it’s on the page for. While many SEOs use ALT text to help with image search, the main purpose of these image descriptors is accesibility.
ALT text is the written copy that appears in place of an image on a webpage if the image fails to load on a user’s screen. This text helps screen-reading tools describe images to visually impaired readers and allows search engines to better crawl and rank your website.
While it can help with your SEO, the key for image ALTs is that it provides a positive user experience for users of all ability levels. It’s not a requirement in terms of being indexed and ranked, but it should be a part of any SEO’s audit to-do list.
Schema
Another new addition to the HTML section this year is Schema. Schema “is a semantic vocabulary of tags (or microdata) that you can add to your HTML to improve the way search engines read and represent your page in SERPs,” according to Moz’s SEO Guide. It’s not just for Google, either. Many search engines use Schema data to help them interpret content on the web: Bing, Yandex, and more.
There’s lots of discussion about whether structured data like Schema improves rankings, but most SEOs agree that, at a minimum, it does help with more comprehensive rich snippets. As many SEOs are implementing and experimenting with Schema nowadays, it’s become table stakes for most industries.