Questions
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Multi URL treated as one?
Hi TapGoods, In Search Console, next to the red 'ADD A PROPERTY' button, there is a grey 'Create a set' button. Click this button and you can group your accounts and be able to view a combined data from these accounts. You can read more about this here: https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/6338828 With the Moz data, once you've created your property set, give Moz access to the set instead of the single account it would've had access to. About the sitemap, assuming that the four URLs resolve to a single URL (which they should), you only need to submit your sitemap to the account for the URL that your site uses. Cheers, David
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | davebuts0 -
Links to Your Site: No Data Available in Google Search Console
Yes I agree with Paul, the www and non-www are still resolving separately, this needs to be fixed and is part of your problem, assuming the site in question is TapGoods which you never confirmed.
Moz Tools | | Joe.Robison1 -
Google Search Console Crawl Errors?
Agreed with Chris, when you have a lot of pages and when your code is a little bit more complex then some basic stuff Google Search Console will have a habit of sending. What I saw in the past as well is that they pick up parts of your tracking code and try to find URL structures within the code that don't really exist but are part of it. Nothing to really worry about, if you make sure you run a monthly or quarterly crawl to check upon weird URL structures on your site and these URLs don't pop-up there you should be fine. As mentioned, just mark them as fixed so the real issues will move up again.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Martijn_Scheijbeler0 -
Blog.site.com vs site.com/blog
Hi, This is a pretty big debate in the world of SEO. Here is a thread that should have all the information you are looking for. https://moz.com/community/q/the-great-subdomain-vs-subfolder-debate-what-is-the-best-answer In my opinion, if you run an E-Commerce site or a site that is hard to build links to, I would stay away from a subdomain. For example, product pages on E-Commerce sites are especially difficult to build links to. If you look at the product page link profile on sites like Amazon, you will find almost no links pointing to those pages. The reason they usually rank #1 in the SERPs is because of their DA. This is where blogs come into play. If you have a sound content marketing strategy that is bringing in links to your blog posts, these posts will pass link juice to your root domain and improve your overall rankings. If you are using site.com/blog rather than blog.site.com it might help your SEO by passing more link juice and improving your root domain, but it certainly won't hurt it. There is a possibility it might help if you switch, so I would opt for that. Hope that helps!
Content & Blogging | | Cody_West0