Mobile SEO Techniques
Millions of users these days access the web
using smartphones running on Android, iOS, or Windows. Hence, it has become
imperative that websites adapt themselves to this changing environment and make
suitable changes in their website design to attract more viewership.
The desktop version of a site might be
difficult to view and use on a mobile device. The version that is not
mobile-friendly requires the user to pinch or zoom in order to read the
content. Users find this a frustrating experience and are likely to abandon the
site. In contrast, a mobile-friendly version is readable and immediately
usable.
A recent Google update makes it mandatory that
a website should be mobile-friendly to be effective on Mobile Search Engines.
Note that a website that is not mobile-friendly will not have any impact on
regular search engines either.
In this chapter, we will see how to make a
website mobile-friendly in order to ensure the visitors who access the website
from mobile devices have an optimized experience.
What is Mobile SEO?
Mobile Search Engine Optimization is the
process of designing a website to make it suitable for viewing on mobile
devices of different screen sizes having low bandwidth. Apart from following
all the SEO rules which are applicable to a desktop website, we need
to take additional care while designing a website for mobile devices. A website
is mobile friendly if it has the following attributes −
• A good mobile website has a responsive
design which performs well on desktops as well as mobile devices. It not only
reduces the maintenance of the website but also makes the content consistent
for the search engines.
• The contents of a good mobile website are
easy to read on a mobile device without having to zoom the screen. It has
appropriate fonts, colors, and layouts.
• It is easy to navigate through a good mobile
website on a small screen. It provides links and buttons that can be easily
maneuvered using a finger.
• A good mobile website is lightweight such
that it takes less bandwidth and time to load on mobile networks.
• The Home Page of a mobile website plays the
most important role in connecting users to the content they are looking for.
Therefore, good mobile websites make sure the most important links are
displayed on the Home Page so that they get enough visibility.
The ranking of a website depends heavily on
how user friendly it is. You can follow the guidelines given below to design a
great mobile-friendly website.
Optimize Your Site for
Mobile
If your site is already optimized for search
engines, then it should not be too difficult to optimize it for mobile devices.
First, let us understand what it takes to go mobile. We can categorize the
steps into three broad categories −
Step 1 − Select a Mobile Configuration
Step 2 − Inform Search Engines
Step 3 − Avoid Common Mistakes
Select a Mobile Configuration
There are three different mobile
configurations that you can choose from −
Step 1 − Responsive Web Design
Step 2 − Dynamic Serving
Step 3 − Separate URLs
Each has its own advantages and disadvantages.
Google recommends responsive design, however it supports all three
configurations. The following table shows how the mobile configuration affects
your URL and HTML code −
Mobile Configuration URL HTML
Responsive Web Design Stays the same Stays the
same
Dynamic Serving Stays the same Different HTMLs
Separate URLs Different URLs Different HTMLs
Responsive Web Design
Google recommends responsive web design become
it is the simplest mobile configuration and very easy to implement. It serves
the same HTML code on the same URL, however it adjusts the display based on the
screen size of the mobile device.
Dynamic Serving
Dynamic serving is a type of mobile configuration where the URL
of your website remains unchanged, but it serves different HTML content when
accessed from a mobile device
When your content is dynamically served from the server, make
sure you inform Google that the content it is crawling may look different on
mobile devices. A major drawback of this approach is that you will have to do
additional processing on your content at the server level before severing it to
the user. This approach puts unnecessary load on your server and makes it slow.
Separate URLs
When you maintain two different URLs — one for mobile users and
another for desktop users – make sure you inform Google explicitly when to serve
which version. Google does not recommend separate URLs because it can detect
automatically that your mobile pages are different from your desktop pages.
This approach is not practical when you have a
big website because maintaining two versions of the same website will require
double the effort and money. At the same time, you cannot avoid various
discrepancies in your content while maintaining two versions.
From the viewpoint of SEO, each URL performs
separately. Hence your desktop ranking will never be added to the mobile
ranking and they will always be assumed as separate websites. We don’t
recommend maintaining different URLs for mobile and desktop versions if you
want to draw the benefits of SEO.
Inform Search Engines
Make sure Google and other search engines
understand your mobile configuration. Most important of all, Google must understand
your page so that it can rank your website properly. How you inform Google
depends on which mobile configuration — responsive web design, dynamic serving,
or separate URLs — you have opted for.
In case your site has a responsive design,
Google’s algorithms can understand it automatically without you having to
inform Google. When you have a responsive design, just make sure you have the
following meta-tag in your webpage header −
<meta
name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
The viewport decides how your webpage will be
displayed on a device. A site with responsive design varies its size based on
the size of the device screen. Declare a viewport so that your webpage displays
correctly on any device.
If your website is dynamically served, make
sure you allow Google detect your configuration using the Vary HTTP header −
Vary: User-Agent
The Vary header is important to tell the
search engines that different content will be served on desktops and mobile
devices. This header is really important when your content is served by any
cache system like a Content Delivery Network and those systems will make use of
this header while serving content on different devices.
In case you maintain separate URLs, e.g.,
example.com and m.example.com, then you can inform Google by adding a special
link rel=alternate tag in your desktop version and vice versa as follows.
Desktop page should have following in its
header:
<link
rel="alternate" media="only screen and (max-width: 640px)"
href="http://m.example.com" >
href="http://m.example.com" >
The mobile page should have following in its
header:
<link
rel="canonical" href="http://www.example.com" >
Avoid Common Mistakes
In order to optimize your website for mobile
devices, make sure you avoid committing the following mistakes −
• Slow Mobile Pages − Mobile networks are
slower as compared to wired Internet networks, so it is important to pay
attention to how fast your mobile pages load. It is a critical Google ranking
factor. Use a mobile SEO tool to find out
your mobile page speed. Google provides a number of good tools that you can
use. Browse the following link −
https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/mobile-friendly/
• Don't Block CSS and JavaScript − Google
recommends to use inline CSS and Javascript for mobile-friendly websites so
that they can be downloaded along with the content. So if you don’t have much
CSS, then try to adjust it within the tag itself; but if you are using a lot of
CSS in separate files, then try to include it at the bottom which will stop
blocking the other content being downloaded. The same rule applies to
Javascript, which can be kept inside the page itself or included at the bottom
of the page. If you can avoid including the file at the top of the page, then
make use of async attribute while including them.
<script
async type="text/javascript"
src="jquery.js"></script>
• Mobile Redirects − Since mobile networks are
normally slow, too many redirects can hurt your page speed. If you are
maintaining multiple URLs, make sure all your links point to the relevant
pages. In case you maintain multiple URLs and you recognize a user is visiting
a desktop page from a mobile device and you have an equivalent mobile page at a
different URL, then redirect the user to that URL instead of displaying a 404
error.
• Heavy Images − Heavy images reduce the load
time, however we cannot completely get rid of them since they are useful and
effective. Therefore you should maintain a good balance between text and heavy
images. Use a good tool to optimize your images and save them at low resolution
to avoid heavy downloads.
• Avoid plug-ins and pop-ups − Plug-ins like
Flash and Java may not be available on user’s mobile device. Always ensure you
don’t have any unplayable content on your mobile page. Avoid using pop-ups on
mobile pages because it becomes quite clumsy to close these pop-ups on a mobile
device.
While creating a mobile page, always keep in
mind that the user has limited space to work on. So, you need to be as concise
as possible while creating titles, URLs, and meta-descriptions – of course
without compromising the essence or quality of information.
Useful Tools
Here is a list of some useful tools that you
can use to find out how mobile friendly your site is −
• Google Webmaster Tools − Use the available
Google tools and techniques to understand what should be used and what should
be avoided while designing desktop as well as mobile websites.
• Mobile Emulator − It lets you see how your the site appears on a wide variety of mobile devices.
• Moz Local − Use this tool to ensure that
your local SEO is in order.
• Responsive Web Design Testing Tool − Use
this tool to see how your responsive site looks like on a variety of mobile
devices with different standard screen sizes.
• Screaming Frog − This is a useful tool that
allows you to analyze your site and double-check all the redirects.
• User Agent Switcher − This is a Firefox an add-on that you can use to find out how your site looks like when accessed from
a different user agent.
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