Four Steps To A Successful Mobile SEO Guide

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Are you a small business owner who crafts your own digital marketing grappling with Google’s April 21st mobile-friendly update?

In today’s post, The Website Marketing Group will guide you for dealing with the aftermath of Google’s April 21st update. Although you have updated and boosted your mobile traffic, search engine optimisation process is never complete.

Last year traffic on mobile devices exceeded traffic on desktop, reflecting an evolution of search behavior. If creating a good user experience for your mobile visitors wasn’t enough incentive, Google has made mobile-friendliness mandatory: get mobile-friendly or your rankings will suffer consequences on the SERPs. To evaluate your own site’s mobile-friendliness, use Google’s free Mobile-Friendly Testing Tool — plug in your URL and the tool grades the page’s mobile-friendliness based on the ease of tapping links and buttons, the readability of fonts, the size of content and the presence of any content that may be blocked from a mobile browser.

Once your site itself is mobile-friendly, it is recommended taking necessary steps to optimise how your listings appear on a mobile SERP. Plus, you will need to look at the available reports to see how all the changes are impacting your traffic. This mobile-friendly SEO guide covers:

  1. Creating a mobile baseline report in Google Webmaster Tools.
  2. Determining how your site was impacted by the algorithm update.
  3. The effect of the mobile-friendly label versus other SERP annotations.
  4. How to edit the new mobile breadcrumb URLs.

1. Create a Mobile Baseline Report

A mobile baseline report tells you the traffic you get from Google mobile searchers so you can compare this data to your traffic after the update. To create a mobile baseline report, you’ll need to access Google Webmaster Tools. Once inside, choose your site and drop down to Search Traffic > Search Queries. From there, click Filters and change Search to Mobile from Web.

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2. Determine How Your Site was Impacted

Google Webmaster Trends Analyst Gary Illyes said that it would take a full week for the algorithm update to reach its full effect, and as of today it’s been a week. It’s time to dive into the data and see where you have settled. While clicks are always the end goal of any SEO equation, you’re going to want to turn your attention to the impressions in this particular case. Fluctuation in impressions tend to indicate change in search engine rankings.

Be mindful, however, that site owners and digital marketers are testing searches and SERPs heavily right now, and data from the past week (and weeks to come) can very well reflect false inflation. It’s important, then, to keep monitoring the data closely in the weeks to come.

3. Mobile-Friendly Label vs. Other SERP Annotations

Just because your site is mobile-friendly, doesn’t mean you’ll get the mobile-friendly status as well. If you have implemented schema markup that shows, for example, a video thumbnail, a jump-to-app link or how many product listings you offer, that markup will be shown rather than your mobile-friendliness label — even if your site is, in fact, mobile friendly.

If you’re wondering which SERP annotation is most important to have, Bruce Clay, Inc. SEO Manager Robert Ramirez explained that the critical aim is standing out.

“Whichever SERP annotation stands out is the one you should focus on,” Ramirez said. “If you’re in an e-commerce environment where a lot of product options is important, then the number of results on a page could be high value. A video thumbnail may really stand out, and so may ‘jump to app.’ It all depends on the business, the SERP and the competition.”

If you don’t have any other schema markup at play, the mobile-friendly annotation is a great thing to have. If your competitors don’t have the mobile-friendly label and you do, it will differentiate you from the pack. Furthermore, as searchers adapt to the new label, they’ll naturally start to click through to SERP entries with mobile-friendly labels.

4. The New Structure of Mobile URLs

Another change that came about in the weeks leading up to mobile madness was how Google displays result URLs in mobile SERPs. Rather than showing the actual URLs, mobile SERPs now display the structure of the page location in a breadrumb-like format. The best part about this new look is that you have control over how your breadcrumb URL displays. Take a look at the following example:

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Examples of Structured URLs WITHOUT Schema

If you haven’t used schema to dictate your site name, Google will use your domain. The mobile SERP pictured below shows examples of three publications who have not yet used schema markup to designate their site names. The result is a lengthy URL that doesn’t capitalise on the new structure that aims to neaten and better present URLs.

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If you want to control the breadcrumbs, it is recommended to use schema markup. Not only will your URL structure look neater in this new format, you’ll save on valuable SERP real estate by ridding yourself of the clunky www. and .com, thus allowing more high-signal information about the result to display in the breadcrumbs.