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Gary Illyes shared a tip on how to keep a redirect active for a year for Google search purposes. The signals from the original page A to the landing page B will all carry over and will remain on page B even after the redirect is removed if that redirect is active for a year. Gary also recommends keeping it indefinitely ( if possible) for the sake of the users. SEO Tip #1 21: Some file extensions in the URL can confuse Google The only SEO effect I can think of is accidental file extensions that confuse things. Eg a web page that ends in “.gif” … probably will have trouble being picked up for web-search. If UX says “no” & there's no SEO advantage, I'd skip it anyway.
SEO Tip #1 22: You don't need to change rel=”nofollow” to rel=”sponsored” People WhatsApp Number List started to panic after Google announced, as part of the Link Spam Update, that all affiliate links, links in guest posts, or any other type of paid links had to be qualified with rel=” sponsored”. Google confirms that rel=”nofollow” in links are OK and that it is not necessary to change them to rel=”sponsored”, as I had already reported at the time . SEO Tip #1 23: Best practices for a Google News sitemap Some of the Google .

News sitemap sitemap best practices recommended by Google include: Have a separate sitemap or sitemap index for Google News; Update the site's sitemap with new articles as they are published; List there only articles published in the last 2 days; Add up to 1000 articles to a sitemap. SEO Tip #1 24: Removing a portion of your website will most likely affect your ranking So, asked differently, if you remove a part of your website, will that website rank differently? Yes, of course it will. It's a different website afterwards. your website, your site will essentially become a different site and may be ranked differently.
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