Digital Marketing

Google’s New Mobile-First Index Could Affect Your Rankings

Welcome to the mobile era, officially. Starting in March 2021, Google will switch to a mobile-first index for all sites. So if your content only appears on the desktop version and not on mobile, you can bid adieu to its Google rankings. No matter how strong your SEO efforts are.

Is your site at risk of disappearing from relevant Google results? It most certainly could be if your mobile site and desktop site do not show the same content. Anything you’ll want to be indexed by Google has to appear on the mobile site, too. 

Google’s John Mueller provided new information about the new Mobile-First Index at Google’s PubCon Pro Virtual 2020. The big news is that desktop-only sites will be dropped entirely from the index, gone. Not only that, but Google will also drop from its index all assets only appearing on the desktop version of a site, such as content, comments, reviews, and so on.

“… we’re now almost completely indexing the web using a smartphone Googlebot, which matches a lot more what users would actually see when they search (…) when a site is shifted over to mobile-first indexing, we will drop everything that’s only on the desktop site. We will essentially ignore that”

John Mueller
Webmaster Trends Analyst at Google

In this sense, Mueller has warned that sites with mobile versions hosted in “m-dot” subdomains, those with mobile versions hosted in “m.domain.com” subdomains, and those that contain “hreflang” attributes can suffer bugs or problems, especially when they do not direct traffic directly to the mobile version of the Web page. [Aside: hreflang is a tag created to tell Google what content to index when a web page contains subdomains, for example, for several versions of the same page in other languages. 

Bottom line

The content will only be indexed and rank when it appears on the mobile version of a website. Think about it. Does the mobile version of your site show all the content you want to be ranked by Google? 

Will five months be sufficient time for users to adjust? The company hopes so because starting in March 2021, all desktop-only content will disappear from their search results. Adequate or not, the reality is you need to start verifying that all your content appears on mobile, too.

Background

Google first launched this initiative and mobile-first indexing in 2016. When Google first launched it, Google said it would begin the process of crawling the web from a mobile-phone perspective “first.” The truth is, Google noted early on that it is your job to make sure your desktop and mobile site were in sync, in sync with content, schema, links, etc. In March 2020, Google announced everything would switch over to mobile indexing by September 2020. Still, Google later pushed that deadline off because of COVID to March 2021.

Is your site desktop-only? Contact our experts today to correct it ASAP and optimize your mobile site in the process.

Milos Mudric

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