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If Google thinks that's what the user wants

Posted: Sat Dec 21, 2024 3:42 am
by tanjitanji0011
News and/or editorial sites often break long articles into several shorter pages.
E-commerce sites may divide the product catalog of a large category into multiple pages.
Discussion forums often break threads into sequential URLs.
If you divide your site content into multiple pages and want them to appear in search results, it is advisable to adopt one of the three solutions below.

1) Do nothing . Content split across multiple pages is very whatsapp number philippines common, and Google does a pretty good job of returning the most relevant results to users, regardless of whether the content is split across multiple pages or not.

2) Implement a View All page . Users typically prefer to view a category or an entire post on a single page.

for that specific query, it will attempt to show the See All page in search results.

You can also add rel=”canonical” to your component pages to let Google know that you want the View All version to appear in search results.

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3) Use http headers or rel=”next” and rel=”prev” link tags to indicate the relationship between component URLs.

This type of markup allows search engines to understand the logical sequence of pages, which allows them to consolidate their linking properties and typically direct users to the first page in the sequence.

Note : You should not use this technique simply to indicate the reading order of a series of articles, but to indicate a single long content divided into multiple pages.