In need of some easy tips to better optimize your site? Look no
further for some quick ways to identify potentially significant SEO
issues.
- Home page canonical issues – the easiest and
probably most common source of duplicate content. Check variations of
your home page as these are still considered “separate” pages. By
implementing a 301 redirect from the other variations to the main
domain, inbound links will be aggregated and duplicate content resolved.
Sometimes you’ll come across situations in which an entire site will be
duplicated with pages that render as both with the www and without. So,
always double check.
www.example.com
www.example.com/index.html
www.example.com/index.php
example.com
example.com/index.html
- Duplicate Title Tags – a simple report in Google
Webmaster Tools (Diagnostics > HTML Suggestions). Export into in
Excel and start with the title tags that have the most duplicates. You
may find that a lot of important content is not accurately reflected by
having unique title tags and therefore hurting organic visibility.
- 302 Redirects – Quickly and easily find a list of
all URLs on your site that have temporary 302 redirects. These should be
changed to permanent 301 redirects to better preserve link juice. My
favorite tool is the Screaming Frog SEO Spider Tool, which spits everything out into Excel for you.
- Suggested URL parameters – in Google Webmaster
Tools, the URL parameter report includes a list of parameters found in
your site’s URLs. This is a great way to mitigate the negative effects
of duplicate content. For each listed parameter, you can tell Googlebot
if that parameter doesn’t change the page’s content and to ignore it in
order for Google to crawl your site more efficiently.
- View your site as a search engine does – ever wonder exactly how Google sees your content? Wonder no more, with tools like SEO-Browser.com quickly visualize whether the page is loaded with too many links or if some content can’t be read (like Flash).
/Search Engine Journal/