Moz Q&A is closed.
After more than 13 years, and tens of thousands of questions, Moz Q&A closed on 12th December 2024. Whilst we’re not completely removing the content - many posts will still be possible to view - we have locked both new posts and new replies. More details here.
Hiding Page Titles By Display None
-
Hi. I am new to this community, and new to SEO as well. A friend asked me to give them suggestions on onsite optimization for their Drupal website.
I know page titles are very important, and usually they should be set to H1. (At least I think) This particular website has all their page titles set to H2 and they are using display:none in their stylesheet to hide them for graphic design reasons.
What would be the most practical work around for this? We don't want this to appear sketchy in the eyes of the SE's, but putting page titles at the top of their pages really would take away from their graphical design.
The second issue is that they use a module called Quicktabs for tabbed product specs on each page. Each tab is actually pulled from a post (called a node in Drupal), so each tab has it's own title that is an H2. So not only are they hiding the main page title, but they are hiding 5 others within the tabs, and their are 6 H2 elements showing up on each product page all set to display:none.
Any creative suggestions?
Hope that makes sense....
Thank you!
-
WOW! Let me just say that again, WOW!
Yes, I would suggest a Drupal person or perhaps a better template. This one seems out of date as it still uses inline CSS. As Mary Anne mentioned, there are other issues as well.
Before you try and re-write everything for the H2s, I would look at some other code issues such as the alt tags.
Personally, I would look for another template after talking to someone who knows Drupal.
All the best
-
Thanks Maryanne,
I will definitely mention those image sizes. They are pretty large.
I need to get an H1 onto these pages. H1's are important, right?
In your opinions, what would be the most effective/least harmful method of doing this....for short term until we can figure something better out.....
- Set the hidden titles to be H1's instead of H2's?
or
- Manually go into each page and create an H1 using the post WYSIWYG editor? (Using this method, the H1 would come AFTER the H2, but at least it would not be hidden)
What are your thoughts?
-
Sheesh...I knew I wasn't losing my marbles when I thought this looked more complicated than normal. This CMS is Drupal.....just FYI, here's what is happening...
These pages are made in a module (equivalent to a plug in for Wordpress) called Panels. With panels, you can define content areas within your page, kind of like creating
sections. Eachsection is called a pane. In this case, they pulled in the information they are showing in each pane through another module called Views. So, on the lt3g page, there are 2 different panes above the tabbed section.
When you create a pane, Drupal asks you for a pane title. The tabs at the bottom are also a module that pulls posts into a tabbed section. Since each post has its own title, each tab shows an H2. In total, there are 10 H2s on this page!!
And the Analytics code is Google anlaytics installed into a pane. (I don't think they had to install the code onto every page, but they did), and they titled the pane 'Analytics'
I think this might be a job for a Drupal themer. Maybe that's what I will propose this company look into.
Also, for the
| FRS Custom Solutions, which indicates there should be something before the pipe, the <title>tag would go before the pipe, and installing the page_title module would allow you to define that.</p> <p>Usually I hear good things about Drupal, but I think in this case, with the use of panels to make pages, it just complicated things.</p></title>
-
Although the hiding of those headers is a little odd, I doubt you'd get hit for it as the hidden h2's are all consistent with the displayed content - it doesn't look (to me, at least) like anything's being done in a spammy manner. H2's are a very weak ranking factor to begin with, and It's not like you're keyword stuffing or trying to rank for irrellevant keywords. Of course, if you can find someone who can tweak things and treat those elements appropriately, all the better.
Off topic, but you may also suggest to your friend that they optimize their images. Those image files on the first page you mentioned are very large for the sizes at which they are being displayed and needlessly add to the page load times.
-
On the LT3G page, you have these elements that should be headers.
- ComLink LT<sup>3G</sup>
- <sup>MEDICARE APPROVED</sup>
- <sup>ComLink LT<sup>3G</sup> - Product Overview</sup>
- <sup>With the ComLink LT<sup>3G</sup>, you can:</sup>
But they are manipulated by in-line CSS. Even though there are H2s with appropriate text for the header?
Then you have this
## Products-LT3G Main Image
Which would go above your image LT3G-Rtg-Rot-Web.png
So you are saying you do not need the text atop the image for esthetics. Which is understandable.
Therefore, why do you not have that H2 tag classed to swap the text for the image? Or can you not manipulate your CMS this way?
On the Company page I am not sure why the H2 is below the text.
## Analytics Code
And what is the analytics code? : )
First, and for other reasons than the H2, this CMS is not very good. I feel as though you will continue to have many issues moving forward. Such as page titles. For the company page you have | FRS Custom Solutions which indicates that there should be something before the pipe (|).
I do not see yet a clear way out of this as the H2s are used for headers in some cases and then for nothing in others such as the analytics code.
Am I following this correctly, or totally missing the boat here?
-
No, I have no control over showing it. Drupal forces you to give each page a title.
http://www.frs-solutions.com/content/comlink-lt3g
Here is a link to one of the inner pages. This page has an image. But here is a page with no image: http://www.frs-solutions.com/content/Company
I am not knowlegable enough with CSS and creating template pages to go about having the title display as an image on some pages, but as text on others.
-
the first question would be why have it at all if you do not want to show it. I presume you have no control over it showing?
Then I would ask; in that space, what is showing now and why could you not swap for an image?
It might be better for you to post the URL of the site so I can see what you are trying to accomplish.
-
Ok. That's what I thought. But I wasn't sure. Do you know, is there any legitimate way to hide a post title (that's forced by the CMS) from both SE's and visitors without using the image swap method?
-
Sketchy as it adds no value to the visitor. It just depends on how often SEs look at CSS as to if/when you will get penalized. They might not look at the CSS unless they see other indicators.
What you are doing I would consider keyword manipulation, and that is sketchy.
Always look at the value of what you do with respect to visitors. If it adds no value, don't do it.
I hope that helps
-
Hi Richard,
Thanks for your response. Sorry if I was unclear...I am referring to the titles of the post. Not the <title>tag. Drupal forces you to give each post a title. And yes, the post titles are set to display as H2's, but the H2's in the stylesheet are set to display:none like this:</p> <div class="cssHead focusRow "><span class="cssSelector ">h2</span> {</div> <div class=" "> <div class="cssPropertyListBox "> <div class="cssProp focusRow editGroup "><span class=" "> </span><span class="cssPropName editable ">color</span><span class="cssColon ">: </span><span class="cssPropValue editable ">#595959</span><span class="cssSemi ">;</span></div> <div class="cssProp focusRow editGroup "><span class=" "> </span><span class="cssPropName editable ">display</span><span class="cssColon ">: </span><span class="cssPropValue editable ">none</span><span class="cssSemi ">;</span></div> <div class="cssProp focusRow editGroup "><span class=" "> </span><span class="cssPropName editable ">font-size</span><span class="cssColon ">: </span><span class="cssPropValue editable ">22px</span><span class="cssSemi ">;</span></div> <div class="cssProp focusRow editGroup "><span class=" "> </span><span class="cssPropName editable ">margin</span><span class="cssColon ">: </span><span class="cssPropValue editable ">0.8em 0</span><span class="cssSemi ">;</span></div> <div class="cssProp focusRow editGroup "><span class="cssSemi "><br /></span></div> <div class="cssProp focusRow editGroup "><span class="cssSemi ">There is no image swapping or text indent. So, search engines CAN see the H2, but visitors can't. Would this be considered sketchy or creative CSS?</span></div> <div class="cssProp focusRow editGroup "></div> <div class="cssProp focusRow editGroup "><span class="cssSemi ">And no, they are not in order... H2 obviously comes first on the page, followed by an H1 element if it's manually inserted onto the page.<br /></span></div> </div> </div></title>
-
Hi April,
Headers and Titles are different, so are you saying that Drupal pulls the title from the H2? If so, are you swapping out the text for an image, or just moving the text off the screen?
It is not uncommon to move text off the screen and swap that placeholder with an image, although it would look a bit sketchy to just move the text out of sight.
[Without direct knowledge] I don't believe Google is penalizing for creative CSS work unless they spot sketchy behavior such as moving lots of text out of view, which they would see as adding no value to the visitor, but would see it as keyword manipulation.
When you swap for an image, you have to define a size for the image space. This would indicate to the SEs that you are in fact moving text and swapping for an image of a certain size.
Sketchy would look like text indent of -9999px with no width or height size or with a very small width or height size of perhaps a couple pixels. Or not even indicating an background image for the div.
In short, if you are swapping text for an image, you are fine and this is common practice as long as SEs can see that this is for visual enhancements rather than keyword manipulation.
I would not worry as much about which headers are used as long as they are used in order. Such as H1s followed by H2s followed by H3s followed by H4s. Not H2s then a H3 then H1. Not that this would penalize you, but it is best practice.
I hope this answered your question
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Duplicate 'meta title' issue (AMP & NON-AMP Pages)
how to fix duplicate meta title issue in amp and non-amp pages? example.com
On-Page Optimization | | 21centuryweb
example.com/amp We have set the 'meta title' in desktop version & we don't want to change the title for AMP page as we have more than 10K pages on the website. ----As per SEMRUSH Tool---- ABOUT THIS ISSUE It is a bad idea to duplicate your title tag content in your first-level header. If your page’s <title>and <h1> tags match, the latter may appear over-optimized to search engines. Also, using the same content in titles and headers means a lost opportunity to incorporate other relevant keywords for your page.</p> <p><strong>HOW TO FIX IT</strong></p> <p>Try to create different content for your <title> and <h1> tags.<br /><br />this is what they are recommending, for the above issue we have asked our team to create unique meta and post title for desktop version but what about AMP page?<br /><br />Please help!</p></title>0 -
How many hyphens are allowed in page titles or image names?
When I was going through certification, I was told it should be limited to one or two. I was curious if there is a change.
On-Page Optimization | | SeobyKP0 -
Is the URL Matching the Page Title Important?
Hello I have tried searching for an answer on this but I can't get a clear answer due to the results when searching for URL title. I have just launched our second Shopify site for one of our brands. My first site launched in 2014 but when I launched I didn't pay much heed to SEO for page titles, URLs, etc so have retrospectively fixed this over time. For my Shopify site just launching I want to get it as right as possible from the start (learning from mistakes). My question is regarding URLs and what my approach should be for better SEO. So, I have a page with a Title of Newton Leather Wallets, Purses, Card Holders & Glasses Cases and the URL is https://www.tumbleandhide.com/collections/newton-leather-wallets-card-holders It was my understanding that I should try and make the URL reflect the Page Title more accurately. The problem is that this takes the character count to 77. On other pages it can be in the 80s. Will the above link be better for SEO than say just https://www.tumbleandhide.com/collections/newton I am just wary of the URL's being too long as my Moz Site Crawl is returning a lot of URLs that are too long. Thanks in Advance.
On-Page Optimization | | lukegj0 -
Page Title Length
Hi Gurus, I understand that it is a good practice is to use 50-60 characters for the a page title length. Google appends my brand name to the end of each title (15 characters including spaces) it index. Do I need to count what google adds as part of the maximum recommended length? i.e.
On-Page Optimization | | SunnyMay
is the maximum 50-60 characters + the 15 characters brand name Google adds to the end of the title or 50-60 including the addition? Many thanks!
Lev0 -
Will it upset Google if I aggregate product page reviews up into a product category page?
We have reviews on our product pages and we are considering averaging those reviews out and putting them on specific category pages in order for the average product ratings to be displayed in search results. Each averaged category review would be only for the products within it's category, and all reviews are from users of the site, no 3rd party reviews. For example, averaging the reviews from all of our boxes products pages, and listing that average review on the boxes category page. My question is, will this be doing anything wrong in the eyes of Google, and if so how so? -Derick
On-Page Optimization | | Deluxe0 -
How to Handle duplicate pages/titles in Wordpress
The wordpress blog causes problems with page titles. If you go to the second page of blog posts it there's a different URL but with the same page title. for example: page 1: site/blog page 2: site/blog/page/2 Each page gets flagged for duplicate page titles. Thanks in advance for your thoughts,
On-Page Optimization | | heymarshall1 -
Can I use Same Keyword for Multi pages Title Tags?
Hello All, I am working on client website and currently they are targeting One Keywords for multi pages. As I have search with Allintitle: Search query and Google display around 37 pages of website which carry same keyword in "Title Tags". I have told to client to change the "Title Tags" but they want that keyword for all relevant pages. So I want to know is that harm in Search Engine Ranking? Note: They have not done the link building activities for multi pages with same Keyword, they are using only in "Title Tags" only
On-Page Optimization | | jemindesai0 -
Page speed tools
Working on reducing page load time, since that is one of the ranking factors that Google uses. I've been using Page Speed FireFox plugin (requires FireBug), which is free. Pretty happy with it but wondering if others have pointers to good tools for this task. Thanks...
On-Page Optimization | | scanlin0