Tips & Tricks for Mobile Search Engine Optimization
Here’s the way to make your website more friendly to both Google and visitors.
Say Goodbye to Forced Redirects, Long Live Subdirectories and Subdomains Have you had any situations.
If you’re browsing a website on your smartphone, click on a link that opens another tab within the browser. To be brutally honest, it’s a bit annoying to attend to all those redirects that open too many new tabs in a smartphone browser. The reason why forced redirects are so bad is that they are a desktop-first strategy, not designed for user experience on mobile. Not only do they hurt website users, but also website owners. Forced redirects can easily lead to a high bounce rate from frustrated people that leave for other sites shortly after arriving. The way to fix that is through subdirectories and subdomains.
A subdirectory may be a website pathway that results in other pages from the most domain. It’s a direct approach to structuring a website, easy for Google to understand, and the one that could be enriched with keywords.)
Subdomains divide parts of a website into their dedicated hierarchy


Get Specific
A better option here is the ‘hamburger-style’ menu. It’s a well-liked navigation element on mobile apps and websites that has advantages for both SEO and user experience. The hamburger menu is the three horizontal lines that look like a hamburger touch. The mobile site of Best Buy uses this element rather than the mega menu to display more items on a smaller screen. One could say that long ‘hamburger’ menus take up a lot of space when opened. While this is often true, they’re still better options because they take the shape of the screen for a far better user experience. Okay, back to SEO. The hamburger makes navigation easier and therefore increases user dwell time. Google has claimed that this factor doesn’t directly impact SEO, but it’s still incredibly important. It trumps the bounce rate, which may be a negative ranking signal. By increasing the time people spend on a site, you’re sending a positive signal to Google like ‘My website is awesome and other people like it because they enjoy browsing it!’Google will check your website with spiders, of course, and might respond by improving your positions in SERPs. Nice deal, right? Use Netpeak Spider to do an entire SEO website analysis and check for usability issues after implementing any changes.
This is what the basic website audit looks like:
Tick the parameters during a sidebar → ‘Status code’, ‘Issues’, ‘Response time’, ‘Last-Modified’, ‘Allowed in robots.txt’, ‘Canonical URL’, ‘Redirects’.
Enter your domain address into the ‘Initial URL’ bar, and begin crawling.
When the crawling is over, you’ll get down to analyzing detected issues on your website.
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quo populo forensibus contentiones et, nibh error in per.Denis Robinson
As your budget progresses and evolves, continue referring to your SMART objectives. Stay focused and remember your goals – they will always inform what your next step will be!