Post by parvej64 on Oct 23, 2023 10:40:48 GMT
This page contains redirects. Let's assume a situation where the blogger refreshes the product ranking and replaces the product of year with the best-selling product of year. Therefore, the author also changes the entry's address from to , and the system automatically performs a redirection from the old address to the new address. This is exactly the page containing the redirect reported in . There is nothing wrong here, this is a completely normal, everyday situation.
Of note is improving internal linking so that links from other blog entries point to the new address since mid-year. We just saved some crawl budget. A common mistake is internal linking without or from to . Alternate page containing the correct canonical page tag The canonical link tells the robot where the original version of the photo retouching content is. This is useful so that bots don't index, for example, a product list with sorting enabled (the set of products is the same, just the order has changed). This message informs us that the robot has found a duplicate of the given subpage, but it contains a canonical link to the original page. That's all well and good, but it's worth checking where these duplicates are coming from.
Maybe there's something in the internal linking that needs to be fixed so we can save on our crawl budget. Not Found Let us assume a situation where you do not and will no longer have a specific product and there is no similar product in the store and you do not have redirects. In this case, the product subpage should show an error, which is completely normal. What's worth paying attention to? Remember store blog readers maybe one of the products? Are there links to products on other websites? In order not to lose readers and save your crawl budget at the same time, you should monitor internal and external links so that they always point to the correct subpage.
Of note is improving internal linking so that links from other blog entries point to the new address since mid-year. We just saved some crawl budget. A common mistake is internal linking without or from to . Alternate page containing the correct canonical page tag The canonical link tells the robot where the original version of the photo retouching content is. This is useful so that bots don't index, for example, a product list with sorting enabled (the set of products is the same, just the order has changed). This message informs us that the robot has found a duplicate of the given subpage, but it contains a canonical link to the original page. That's all well and good, but it's worth checking where these duplicates are coming from.
Maybe there's something in the internal linking that needs to be fixed so we can save on our crawl budget. Not Found Let us assume a situation where you do not and will no longer have a specific product and there is no similar product in the store and you do not have redirects. In this case, the product subpage should show an error, which is completely normal. What's worth paying attention to? Remember store blog readers maybe one of the products? Are there links to products on other websites? In order not to lose readers and save your crawl budget at the same time, you should monitor internal and external links so that they always point to the correct subpage.