The Moz Q&A Forum

    • Forum
    • Questions
    • My Q&A
    • Users
    • Ask the Community

    Welcome to the Q&A Forum

    Browse the forum for helpful insights and fresh discussions about all things SEO.

    1. SEO and Digital Marketing Q&A Forum
    2. Categories
    3. Technical SEO Issues
    4. Switchboard Tags - Multiple desktop pages pointing to one mobile page

    Switchboard Tags - Multiple desktop pages pointing to one mobile page

    Technical SEO Issues
    2 2 1.1k
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as question
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • JBlank
      JBlank last edited by

      I have recently started to implement switchboard tags to connect our mobile and desktop pages, and to ensure that our mobile pages show up in rankings for mobile users.  Because our desktop site is much deeper in content than our mobile site, there are a number of desktop pages we would like to have point to one mobile page.  However, with the switchboard tags, this poses a problem because it requires multiple rel=canonical tags to be placed on the one mobile page.  I'm assuming this will either confuse the search engines, or they will choose to ignore the rel=canonical tag altogether.

      Any ideas on how to approach this situation other than creating an equivalent mobile version of every desktop page or implementing a user agent detection redirect?

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • bridget.randolph
        bridget.randolph last edited by

        Hi JBlank,

        My solution to this is to ask whether you actually should be using the switchboard tags on all your desktop pages?

        Switchboard tags (which are basically a special version of rel=canonical for mobile), are meant to indicate to a search engine that the two pages contain (near-)duplicate content, but that it's ok because one is a mobile version of the other. If the content is not substantially the same, you don't need to have a switchboard tag (just like with the normal rel=canonical).

        So my recommendation:

        • are any of your mobile pages direct or near-direct duplicates of your desktop pages? If so, use the switchboard tags for those desktop pages. You should also implement redirects in both directions based on user agent so that people land on the version most relevant to them. (And include the option to switch to the other version).

        • for the other desktop pages, which may relate to certain mobile pages but which are not at risk of being classed as duplicate content, you can simply ignore them, and allow mobile users to land on a non-mobile-friendly page; or you can redirect mobile visitors to the most relevant page on the mobile site (again, with the option to switch to the 'full site').

        If you actually have multiple desktop pages which are so similar that they could both have a rel=alternate tag to the same mobile page, that's probably a separate issue.

        If you're concerned about ranking for deep desktop content in mobile search, I'm afraid the most sustainable solution is to develop that content into a more mobile-friendly format.

        Hope that helps!

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • 1 / 1
        • First post
          Last post
        • Can slow mobile page speed affect desktop search results?
          effectdigital
          effectdigital
          1
          3
          213

        • How to load the mobile version of a page without the desktop version in the background (and vice versa)
          TucsonAZWebDesign
          TucsonAZWebDesign
          0
          2
          26

        • Canconical tag on site with multiple URL links but only one set of pages
          Linda-Vassily
          Linda-Vassily
          0
          6
          221

        • Mobile & desktop pages
          RobertFisher
          RobertFisher
          0
          9
          98

        • Want to Target Mobile site for Google Mobile Version and Desktop Site for Google Desktop Version
          Cyrus-Shepard
          Cyrus-Shepard
          0
          4
          1.6k

        • One Page - Targeting Multiple Low Searched Keywords.
          AlanMosley
          AlanMosley
          0
          4
          468

        • If multiple links on a page point to the same URL, and one of them is no-followed, does that impact the one that isn't?
          Tone_Agency
          Tone_Agency
          0
          2
          796

        • Should i use NoIndex, Follow & Rel=Canonical Tag In One Page?
          DigitalJungle
          DigitalJungle
          0
          3
          2.3k

        Get started with Moz Pro!

        Unlock the power of advanced SEO tools and data-driven insights.

        Start my free trial
        Products
        • Moz Pro
        • Moz Local
        • Moz API
        • Moz Data
        • STAT
        • Product Updates
        Moz Solutions
        • SMB Solutions
        • Agency Solutions
        • Enterprise Solutions
        • Digital Marketers
        Free SEO Tools
        • Domain Authority Checker
        • Link Explorer
        • Keyword Explorer
        • Competitive Research
        • Brand Authority Checker
        • Local Citation Checker
        • MozBar Extension
        • MozCast
        Resources
        • Blog
        • SEO Learning Center
        • Help Hub
        • Beginner's Guide to SEO
        • How-to Guides
        • Moz Academy
        • API Docs
        About Moz
        • About
        • Team
        • Careers
        • Contact
        Why Moz
        • Case Studies
        • Testimonials
        Get Involved
        • Become an Affiliate
        • MozCon
        • Webinars
        • Practical Marketer Series
        • MozPod
        Connect with us

        Contact the Help team

        Join our newsletter
        Moz logo
        © 2021 - 2026 SEOMoz, Inc., a Ziff Davis company. All rights reserved. Moz is a registered trademark of SEOMoz, Inc.
        • Accessibility
        • Terms of Use
        • Privacy