Wednesday, March 11, 2015

While JavaScript, CSS, and linked images make websites look good and function properly, they can cause SEO headaches if those resources are blocked from crawling. Now, Google is aiming to remedy that problem by making sure webmasters know exactly which website features are being blocked.

In a blog post this morning, Google said its new reporting feature will begin with the names of blocked hosts. Clicking on the "rows" column will diagnose the problem in more detail with a list of blocked resources and a step-by-step guide to remedying the issues.

Googling is also making it easier to test sites for crawling problems with Fetch and Render, a URL retrieval feature that gives webmasters screenshots of how a page appears to Googlebot and a typical reader.

Greater transparency into Googlebot crawling issues impacts a number of issues, including "Mobile-Friendly" tags. 
 

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Despite many sites already supporting HTTPS, 80% of those URLs do not show in the Google search results because the webmaster is communicating to Google to display the HTTP version.

Gary Illyes, a Webmaster Trends Analyst at Google, announced on Google+ this morning that over 80% of the eligible HTTPS URLs are not being displayed in Google’s search results as HTTPS URLs, instead they are showing up as HTTP URLs simply because of webmaster configuration.

Gary said they ran a small analysis at Google and found that of the HTTPS URLs eligible to be displayed in the Google search results, over 80% of them are not being displayed. Eligible HTTPS URLs include URLs that have no crawl issues, don’t contain the noindex and have no other problems. But because of how the webmaster configured the site, Google is being instructed to display the HTTP URL instead of the HTTPS URL.

Gary said the webmaster is using the HTTP variant in their sitemap files, in the rel-canonical and rel-alternate-hreflang elements instead of the HTTPS variant.

Google wants you to go HTTPS and even started months ago giving a small ranking benefit to HTTPS URLs. But still, many webmasters are not going HTTPS.

Gary from Google said:

If your site supports HTTPS, please do tell us: use HTTPS URLs everywhere so search engines can see them!

Source:- http://searchengineland.com/google-analysis-shows-80-https-urls-not-displaying-googles-search-results-216441

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