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    4. Tabs and duplicate content?

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    Tabs and duplicate content?

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    • BobAnderson
      BobAnderson Subscriber last edited by

      We own this site http://www.discountstickerprinting.co.uk/ and just a little concerned as I right clicked open in new tab on the tab content section and it went to a new page

      For example if you right click on the price tab and click open in new tab you will end up with the url
      http://www.discountstickerprinting.co.uk/#tabThree

      Does this mean that our content is being duplicated onto another page?

      If so what should I do?

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • BobAnderson
        BobAnderson Subscriber last edited by

        No the site is fully built can you see any more problems? I was considering what tom has said about setting up a canonical tag for the tabs and this has confirmed it for me - thanks tom

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • BlueprintMarketing
          BlueprintMarketing @TomRayner last edited by

          Good replied Tom Thumbs up man I forgot to even bring up canonical tag

          All the best,

          Thomas

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • BlueprintMarketing
            BlueprintMarketing last edited by

            It would appear that you have more of a problem with your navigation then duplicate content. However that's not to say I would not remove http://www.discountstickerprinting.co.uk/#tabThree

            I would simply make sure that the link is rewritten as well as pointing to a true price page instead of what sending people to now.

            Is the site still under development?

            I would either higher a developer to correct it or go to team treehouse to learn HTML and correct it yourself.

            The best of luck to you,

            Thomas

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • TomRayner
              TomRayner last edited by

              Hi there

              You don't have anything to worry about with this.  Having a hashtag query after a URL is widely recognised as the denomination for an internal page anchor.  Simply put, Google won't attempt to index a URL like http://www.discountstickerprinting.co.uk/#tabThree as it knows that it is linking to a point on an existing page, rather than a completely new page or URL.

              To put your mind completely at ease, you could set up a canonical tag on the http://www.discountstickerprinting.co.uk/ page that points to itself - instructing Google that any variations of that URL with #'s or ?querystrings etc. should not be indexed or considered duplicate content.  I consider this good practice in any case and so would recommend that you do that anyway.

              Hope this helps.

              BlueprintMarketing 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
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