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Google Webmaster Tools Now Tracking Smartphone Errors - DailyBlogTips

Google Webmaster Tools Now Tracking Smartphone Errors - DailyBlogTips


Google Webmaster Tools Now Tracking Smartphone Errors

Posted: 04 Dec 2013 07:12 AM PST

When people ask me what are the essential tools I use online, on top of my list there’s always Google Webmaster Tools. It gives you a ton of information about how Google sees your site, problems you might be having and optimization suggestions.

I was browsing the web today and discovered that now Webmaster Tools will also let you know about crawl error on mobile devices. This is a very useful feature because tracking those errors yourself would be quite troublesome.

On top of that the errors being alerted by Google are the ones that might hurt your search rankings under the new algorithm that takes into consideration mobile optimization.

According to SearchEngineLand here are the main errors:

  • Server errors: A server error is when Googlebot got an HTTP error status code when it crawled the page.
  • Not found errors and soft 404s: A page can show a "not found" message to Googlebot, either by returning an HTTP 404 status code or when the page is detected as a soft error page.
  • Faulty redirects: A faulty redirect is a smartphone-specific error that occurs when a desktop page redirects smartphone users to a page that is not relevant to their query. A typical example is when all pages on the desktop site redirect smartphone users to the homepage of the smartphone-optimized site.
  • Blocked URLs: A blocked URL is when the site's robots.txt explicitly disallows crawling by Googlebot for smartphones. Typically, such smartphone-specific robots.txt disallow directives are erroneous. You should investigate your server configuration if you see blocked URLs reported in Webmaster Tools.

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ProBlogger: Good News for Publishers: Facebook Continues to Reward High Quality Content

ProBlogger: Good News for Publishers: Facebook Continues to Reward High Quality Content

Link to @ProBlogger

Good News for Publishers: Facebook Continues to Reward High Quality Content

Posted: 04 Dec 2013 08:03 AM PST

Earlier this week Facebook published a FYI update about more updates that they’ve been making (and are about to make) to what will show in users news feeds (thanks to Jen at FBAdslab for the tipoff).

The information is particularly relevant to those of us with Facebook pages who are sharing links in the hope of driving traffic back to our blogs.

High Quality Content Will Appear More

The ultimate goal of the latest updates to News Feed rankings is to show more relevant news to Facebook users, and Facebook states that they’re continuing to focus their attention upon showing ‘high quality content’ to users.

It seems that they’re going to start giving links to articles a higher ranking than they have been previously – particularly to users using Facebook on mobile devices.

This is great to know as a Facebook Page owner. I’d previously spent more time sharing photos with links in the descriptions of the images but have always put a few direct links into my updates as well – of late I’ve noticed these links doing quite well and now we know why.

Also in Facebook’s FYI update this week is an indication that they’re also focusing their attention upon distinguishing between high quality content vs ‘meme photos’.

This focus upon delivering high quality content to your Facebook page rather than going for cheap comments or engagement talked about a few weeks ago – but it’s only going to become more important (and this is yet another signal from Facebook that you need to pay attention).

Facebook to Start Showing ‘Related Articles’

The next part of Facebook’s update this week is pretty interesting for us as publishers. If someone clicks a link that you share on your Facebook page they will then see up to three related articles directly below in the newsfeed. Here’s how they show it as looking:

facebook-related-articles.png

THIS is pretty cool and has potential to drive some decent traffic to publishers creating high quality content.

Keeping the Conversation Live Longer

Lastly, Facebook indicates that they are going to be bringing back older posts that people comment on in their new feed to lengthen the life of those conversations, which is pretty good if you’re using Facebook as a community engagement tool.

Read the full article on these recent changes over at the Facebook Newsroom and let us know what you think in comments below.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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Good News for Publishers: Facebook Continues to Reward High Quality Content