According to a post on Google published their recommendations and the most common configuration mistakes for websites looking to engage smartphone users and benefit from mobile search results
“Avoiding these mistakes helps your smartphone users engage with your site fully and helps searchers find what they’re looking for faster.”
To improve the search experience for smartphone users and address their pain points, we plan to roll out several ranking changes in the near future that address sites that are misconfigured for smartphone users.
Let’s now look at two of the most common mistakes and how to fix them.
Faulty redirects
Some websites use separate URLs to serve desktop and smartphone users. A faulty redirect is when a desktop page redirects smartphone users to an irrelevant page on the smartphone-optimized website. A typical example is when all pages on the desktop site redirect smartphone users to the homepage of the smartphone-optimized site. For example, in the figure below, the redirects shown as red arrows are considered faulty:
This kind of redirect disrupts a user’s workflow and may lead them to stop using the site and go elsewhere. Even if the user doesn’t abandon the site, irrelevant redirects add more work for them to handle, which is particularly troublesome when they’re on slow mobile networks. These faulty redirects frustrate users whether they’re looking for a webpage, video, or something else, and our ranking changes will affect many types of searches.
Avoiding irrelevant redirects is very easy: Simply redirect smartphone users from a desktop page to its equivalent smartphone-optimized page. If the content doesn’t exist in a smartphone-friendly format, showing the desktop content is better than redirecting to an irrelevant page.
We have more tips about redirects, and be sure to read our recommendations for having separate URLs for desktop and smartphone users.
Smartphone-only errors
Some sites serve content to desktop users accessing a URL but show an error page to smartphone users. There are many scenarios where smartphone-only errors are seen. Some common ones are:
- If you recognize a user is visiting a desktop page from a mobile device and you have an equivalent smartphone-friendly page at a different URL, redirect them to that URL instead of serving a 404 or a soft 404 page.
- Make sure that the smartphone-friendly page itself is not an error page. If your content is not available in a smartphone-friendly format, serve the desktop page instead. Showing the content the user was looking for is a much better experience than showing an error page.
- Incorrectly handling Googlebot-Mobile. A typical mistake is when Googlebot-Mobile for smartphones is incorrectly redirected to the website optimized for feature phones which, in turn, redirects Googlebot-Mobile for smartphones back to desktop site. This results in infinite redirect loop, which we recognize as error.
Avoiding this mistake is easy: All Googlebot-Mobile user-agents identify themselves as specific mobile devices, and you should treat these Googlebot user-agents exactly like you would treat these devices. For example, Googlebot-Mobile for smartphones currently identifies itself as an iPhone and you should serve it the same response an iPhone user would get.
- Unplayable videos on smartphone devices. Many websites embed videos in a way that works well on desktops but is unplayable on smartphone devices. For example, if content requires Adobe Flash, it won’t be playable on an iPhone or on Android versions 4.1 and higher.
Although we covered only two types of mistakes here, it’s important for webmasters to focus on avoiding all of the common smartphone website misconfigurations.
Try to test your site on as many different mobile devices and operating systems, or their emulators, as possible, including testing the videos included on your site. Doing so will improve the mobile web, make your users happy, and allow searchers to experience and experience your content fully.
Grim says
Why have an alternative smartphone-optimized page in the first place? Just use a responsive layout for your website, and it will look good no matter what device it is being viewed on.
Louise says
Like Berkshire Hathaway, Cisco, Advanced Micro Devices, Capital One, Humana, Microsoft, Disney, and Rick Schwartz himeself! (Besides MobileTech.tv and EmergingDomains, DualScreenPhones, etc.)
Hemanth Dondolu says
Here are couple responsive websites on google that works on any screen: http://www.jusq.com http://www.electracolour.ca http://www.saunashowcase.com http://www.dhatri.com
Hemanth Dondolu says
Responsive templates are good but what i see more of them has limited controls and more hyper sensitive areas to fix and i think that’s why still cowmen developers are using standard templates.
Grim says
The truth of the matter is though, if you don’t have an easy to touch icon for your website on a user’s mobile device, you’re going to get left behind. Most people’s sites aren’t worthy enough to go to the effort of creating an app for them, so things will really start changing in the future in regard to how the Internet is (not) accessed by the average mobile user. At the birth of every industry, you start with thousands of manufacturers (or websites in this case) and after enough time, only a select few really matter, while the rest fall to the wayside.
So, what’s the point in caring about gTLDs, again? Too little, (or too much in this case), too late.