Webmaster Forums - Website and SEO Help

Search Engines and Marketing => Website Crawling and Indexing => Topic started by: mvminfotech on November 16, 2018, 11:12:27 PM

Title: What is Canonical issue? How will you resolve them?
Post by: mvminfotech on November 16, 2018, 11:12:27 PM
 What is Canonical issue? How will you resolve them?
Title: Re: What is Canonical issue? How will you resolve them?
Post by: fayeseom on November 16, 2018, 11:30:51 PM
A canonical issue arises when 301 redirects are not properly in place. This means that your website can be accessed by search engines from several different URLs. This means that search engines can then potentially index your site under different URLs, meaning that it will look like a site of duplicated content.

The best and most effective way to resolve the canonical issue is with a permanent 301 redirect. This can be implemented in a number of ways, as detailed below. Depending on what server your website is hosted on will determine the method which you use to implement a redirect.
Title: Re: What is Canonical issue? How will you resolve them?
Post by: kylojoe on November 28, 2018, 04:28:37 AM
A Canonical Error arises when 301 redirections are not properly in right place. It means single page URL can open multiple types in the search engine. It breaks the guidelines of Google Webmaster, it makes another copy of your website/page generate content duplicate issues.
Canonical Tag is an effective way of telling search engines that a specific URL represents the master copy of a page. Canonical Tag used to fetch unique or relevant website URL in duplicate pages. We can resolve issues by place canonical URL in the header section of each page that generate issues of canonical.
Title: Re: What is Canonical issue? How will you resolve them?
Post by: RH-Calvin on November 30, 2018, 02:12:11 AM
A canonical issue arises when 301 redirects are not properly in place. This means that your website can be accessed by search engines from several different URLs. This means that search engines can then potentially index your site under different URLs, meaning that it will look like a site of duplicated content.