keep short posts?
-
From an SEO standpoint, is it worth keeping a blog post that only has a few images and a few sentences? I think the post was meant to be a 'Recent Work' type of a post, but there's only a few images in it and a few short sentences. I'm thinking they're basically useless since I've created an image gallery elsewhere and I'm tempted to delete them.
-
so, if the content marketing, has its own URL extension. so say 123.com/blog- then, just improve the content marketing, so write longer work, make sure that the content marketing follows the guidance set out in Google E-EAT- write quality content marketing, then try and get quality backlinks built to it.
-
You know, pictures only work in a visual way. But from my knowledge and experience, it's better to insert cool posts divided into chapters, contrary to what it seems people like to read and still do.
-
Rather than deleting the page, or blog post, improve it. Add some more, improve also the onsite SEO.
-
hello,
you can still have engagement benifits from it, you can try expanding the content, and add a nofollow tag to the links so it doesnt pass link juice to other pages. -
@camerontway Hi
Last week, I achieved some backlinks for my food delivery <a href="https://menupriceast.com/"> food delivery</a> food delivery website to enhance my clients' experience. I also want to get a backlink service if anyone here is offering it. However, they are not indexed yet. How can I index them? And how can i improve my website ranking?
Sincerely
-
The decision of whether to delete, merge, or enrich depends on your specific situation and priorities. If you have limited resources and the content offers little value, deleting is be the best course of action. Or if you can invest time to enhance the content or choose professional ways to access it, consider those options.
Just focus on providing valuable content to your users and search engines will benefit your SEO strategy in the long run.
-
@camerontway said in keep short posts?:
From an SEO standpoint, is it worth keeping a blog post that only has a few images and a few sentences? I think the post was meant to be a 'Recent Work' type of a post, but there's only a few images in it and a few short sentences. I'm thinking they're basically useless since I've created an image gallery elsewhere and I'm tempted to delete them.
While it may seem tempting to remove a blog post with minimal content, consider its potential SEO value. Even brief posts contribute to your website's indexing and can attract traffic through relevant keywords. Additionally, they offer opportunities for internal linking and engagement. Rather than deletion, consider enhancing the post with additional contexts, such as project insights or client testimonials, to provide value to visitors. Alternatively, you can redirect users to your image gallery while keeping the post for its SEO benefits.
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
-
Seeking Advice & Strategies to Boost Rankings and Moz DA/DR
I'm seeking guidance on optimizing the rankings and increasing Moz Domain Authority (DA) and Domain Rating (DR) for my websites, www.fastlanddeals.com and www.fastlandoffer.com, especially in light of the recent Google March 2024 Core Update. What strategies and tactics do you recommend for navigating these changes effectively and enhancing the overall visibility and authority of these domains?
SEO Tactics | | FredericoSeo0 -
Hi there SEO agency owners
Hi, we are slightly baffled. We have amazing backlinks and good on-site SEO, yet we don’t rank on the first page for our main keyword, “SEO Cardiff.” Now we can't understand why we are not on page one of Google for this keyword? Can someone have a look at our site and tell us why? We think we have better backlinks than some of our direct competitors that rank for this term.
SEO Tactics | | sarahwalsh0 -
how to improve rank
I have a site, can you help me to:
SEO Tactics | | pixou
improve ranking
get high authority backlinks0 -
google webmaster tools Indexing request rejected
when i try to index my posts in google webmaster tools i see this eror : Indexing request rejected
SEO Tactics | | sasansasyino
During live testing, indexing issues were detected with the URL
Crawl
Time
Sep 23, 2023, 11:05:05 PM
Crawled as
Google Inspection Tool desktop
Crawl allowed?
Yes
Page fetch
error
Failed: Hostload exceeded
Indexing allowed?
N/A
Indexing
User-declared canonical
N/A
Google-selected canonical
Only determined after indexing my website : http://123select.ir/0 -
Ranking going south
Hi - I have a site Simply Stairlifts and I don't understand it but I've followed all the SEO processes of cleaning the site and building links, but ranking just keeps falling - any advise would be very gratefully received 👍 .
SEO Tactics | | Naju2310 -
Spam on Google SEO
Do you know any good tips to reduce spam and if spams have an on google ranking?
SEO Tactics | | easyjobber0 -
Collections or blog posts for Shopify ecommerce seo?
Hi, hope you guys can help as I am going down a rabbit hole with this one! We have a solid-ranking sports nutrition site and are building a new SEO keyword strategy on our Shopify built store. We are using collections (categories) for much of the key product-based seo. This is because, as we understand it, Google prioritises collection/category pages over product pages. Should we then build additional collection pages to rank for secondary product search terms that could fit a collection page structure (eg 'vegan sports nutrition'), or should we use blog posts to do this? We have a quality blog with good unique content and reasonable domain authority so both options are open to us. But while the collection/category option may be best for SEO, too many collections/categories could upset our UX. We have a very small product range (10 products) so want to keep navigation fast and easy. Our 7 lead keyword collection pages do this already. More run the risk of upsetting ease/speed of site navigation. On the other hand, conversion rate from collection pages is historically much better than blog pages. We have made major technical upgrades to the blog to improve this but these are yet to be tested in anger. So at the heart of it all - do you guys recommend favouring blog posts or collection/category pages for secondary high sales intent keywords? All help gratefully received - thanks!
SEO Tactics | | WP332 -
Shopify SEO - Collection or Blog post for ecomm seo?
Hi Moz folks, would love your thoughts on benefits of Shopify collection pages v blog posts for ranking secondary shopping keywords not suitable for existing shop pages - all help gratefully received, we are going down a rabbit hole on this one and need some sanity! So, we’re updating our site which already has a reasonable seo foundation and are looking to rank better for key shopping search keywords in our space (d2c sports nutrition). My question is should we prioritise store collection pages (category pages in Shopify terms) or blog posts for some of the main keywords not already covered by our core in-store collections/categories? Priority keywords already covered are things like protein powders, protein bars, energy drinks, etc. As context, we have a small product catalogue (10 products) and for easy navigation on site have these grouped into 7 collections/categories in the main menu and available from the homepage. All are quality high volume and high intent shopping keywords for our business. The secondary terms we are now looking to add content for are things like marathon nutrition, vegan sports nutrition, etc so now need to choose if we create product collection pages for these, or use blog posts to do the work. The advantage of collections, we believe, is that Google is likely to prioritise these in search. The disadvantage from a UX point of view is that more categories in store could make our simple and clear product range (10 products only) look complex or repetitive. Conversely, a blog post removes any UX confusion with too many categories, but we have a conversion rate issue with our blog. It performs well in search, but conversions are poor. We have addressed this with a new keyword targeting strategy and blog customisation, but we have yet to test this so while in theory it should work well, we do not know for certain. In summary: we want to rank key shopping keywords beyond our core ones we have - would you advise we use blog posts or product collection pages? All help gratefully received - thanks! Warren
SEO Tactics | | WP330