9 Common Technical SEO Issues That Actually Matter
If you’d like to follow along, get Ahrefs Webmaster Tools and Google Search Console (both are free) and check for the following issues. Indexability is a webpage’s ability to be indexed by search engines. Pages that are not...
In this article, we’ll see how to find and fix technical SEO issues, but only those that can seriously affect your rankings. If you’d like to follow along, get Ahrefs Webmaster Tools and Google Search Console (both are free) and check for the following issues. Indexability is a webpage’s ability to be indexed by search engines. Pages that are not indexable can’t be displayed on the search engine results pages and can’t bring in any search traffic. Three requirements must be met for a page to be indexable: In Ahrefs Webmaster Tools (AWT): For canonicalization issues in this report, you will need to replace bad URLs in the link rel="canonical" tag with valid ones (i.e., returning an “HTTP 200 OK”). As for pages marked by “noindex” issues, these are the pages with the “noindex” meta tag placed inside their code. Chances are most of the pages found in the report there should stay as is. But if you see any pages that shouldn’t be there, simply remove the tag. Do make sure those pages aren’t blocked by robots.txt first. Recommendation Click on the question mark on the right to see instructions on how to fix each issue. For more detailed instructions, click on the “Learn more” link. A sitemap should contain only pages that you want search engines to index. When a sitemap isn’t regularly updated or an unreliable generator has been used to make it, a sitemap may start to show broken pages, pages that became “noindexed,” pages that were de-canonicalized, or pages blocked in robots.txt. In AWT: Depending on the issue, you will have to: Google uses HTTPS encryption as a small ranking signal. This means you can experience lower rankings if you don’t have an SSL or TLS certificate securing your website. But even if you do, some pages and/or resources on your pages may still use the HTTP protocol. Assuming you already have an SSL/TLS certificate for all subdomains (if not, do get one), open AWT and do these: Finally, let’s check if any resources on the site still use HTTP: You can fix this issue by one of these methods: Learn more: What Is HTTPS? Everything You Need to Know Duplicate content happens when exact or near-duplicate content appears on the web in more than one place. It’s bad for SEO mainly for two reasons: It can cause undesirable URLs to show in search results and can dilute link equity. Content duplication is not necessarily a case of intentional or unintentional creation of similar pages. There are other less obvious causes such as faceted navigation, tracking parameters in URLs, or using trailing and non-trailing slashes. First, check if your website is available under only one URL. Because if your site is accessible as: Then Google will see all of those URLs as different websites. The easiest way to check if users can browse only one version of your website: type in all four variations in the browser, one by one, hit enter, and see if they get redirected to the master version (ideally, the one with HTTPS). You can also go straight into Site Audit’s Duplicates report. If you see 100% bad duplicates, that is likely the reason. In this case, choose one version that will serve as canonical (likely the one with HTTPS) and permanently redirect other versions to it. Then run a New crawl in Site Audit to see if there are any other bad duplicates left. There are a few ways you can handle bad duplicates depending on the case. Learn how to solve them in our guide. Learn more: Duplicate Content: Why It Happens and How to Fix It Pages that can’t be found (4XX errors) and pages returning server errors (5XX errors) won’t be indexed by Google so they won’t bring you any traffic. Furthermore, if broken pages have backlinks pointing to them, all of that link equity goes to waste. Broken pages are also a waste of crawl budget—something to watch out for on bigger websites. In AWT, you should: In the report showing pages with issues, it’s a good idea to add a column for the number of referring domains. This will help you make the decision on how to fix the issue. Now, fixing broken pages (4XX error codes) is quite simple, but there is more than one possibility. Here’s a short graph explaining the process: Dealing with server errors (the ones reporting a 5XX) can be a tougher one, as there are different possible reasons for a server to be unresponsive. Read this short guide for troubleshooting. Recommendation With AWT, you can also see 404s that were caused by incorrect links to your website. While this is not a technical issue per se, reclaiming those links may give you an additional SEO boost. If you’ve already dealt with broken pages, chances are you’ve fixed most of the broken links issues. Other critical issues related to links are: In AWT, you can: Fix the first issue by changing the links from HTTP to HTTPS or simply delete those links if no longer needed. For the second issue, an orphan page needs to be either linked to from some other page on your website or deleted if a given page holds no value to you. Sidenote. Ahrefs’ Site Audit can find orphan pages as long as they have backlinks or are included in the sitemap. For a more thorough search for this issue, you will need to analyze server logs to find orphan pages with hits. Find out how in this guide. Having a mobile-friendly website is a must for SEO. Two reasons: In GSC: You can read Google’s guide for fixing mobile issues here. Performance and visual stability are other aspects of Page Experience signals used by Google to rank pages. Google has developed a special set of metrics to measure user experience called Core Web Vitals (CWV). Site owners and SEOs can use those metrics to see how Google perceives their website in terms of UX. While page experience can be a ranking tiebreaker, CWV is not a race. You don’t need to have the fastest website on the internet. You just need to score “good” ideally in all three categories: loading, interactivity, and visual stability. In GSC: Optimizing for CWV may take some time. This may include things like moving to a faster (or closer) server, compressing images, optimizing CSS, etc. We explain how to do this in the third part of this guide to CWV. Bad website structure in the context of technical SEO is mainly about having important organic pages too deep into the website structure. Pages that are nested too deep (i.e., users need >6 clicks from the website to get to them) will receive less link equity from your homepage (likely the page with the most backlinks), which may affect their rankings. This is because link value diminishes with every link “hop.” Sidenote. Website structure is important for other reasons too such as the overall user experience, crawl efficiency, and helping Google understand the context of your pages. Here, we’ll only focus on the technical aspect, but you can read more about the topic in our full guide: Website Structure: How to Build Your SEO Foundation. In AWT: The way to fix the issue is to link to these deeper nested pages from pages closer to the homepage. More important pages could find their place in site navigation, while less important ones can be just linked to the pages a few clicks closer. It’s a good idea to weigh in user experience and the business role of your website when deciding what goes into sitewide navigation. For example, we could probably give our SEO glossary a slightly higher chance to get ahead of organic competitors by including it in the main site navigation. Yet we decided not to because it isn’t such an important page for users who are not particularly searching for this type of information. We’ve moved the glossary only up a notch by including a link inside the beginner’s guide to SEO (which itself is just one click away from the homepage). When you’re done fixing the more pressing issues, dig a little deeper to keep your site in perfect SEO health. Open Site Audit and go to the All issues report to see other issues regarding on-page SEO, image optimization, redirects, localization, and more. In each case, you will find instructions on how to deal with the issue. You can also customize this report by turning issues on/off or changing their priority. Did I miss any important technical issues? Let me know on Twitter or Mastodon.Solution
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