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Add a “Final Redirect URL” column. If the lowest HTTP status code is "301" and the final redirect URLs all start with HTTPS, everything is fine. Next, click the Issues tab and look for the "HTTPS/HTTP Mixed Content" issue. This indicates that while the initial HTML is being loaded over a secure HTTPS connection, some resource files, such as images, are being loaded over an insecure connection. If you run into any of these issues, read our HTTPS guide to learn what to do. 4. Make sure you can only view one version People visiting your website should only have access to one of the following four versions of your website:
following four versions of your website: Western Sahara Email List The other three variations should be redirected to the canonical (master) version. This is important because Google sees all four of these as separate site versions. Having more than one site accessible can cause crawling and indexing issues. In some cases, this can dilute your link equity and negatively impact your rankings. Install Ahrefs' SEO toolbar , type each URL's version into your browser, and check the HTTP headers to ensure all URLs are redirecting to the same "master" version. For example, if you visit , you will be redirected to a secure version of . The same is true if you visit the secure www version If that doesn't happen, you'll need to introduce redirects. Read more Redirects for SEO: A Simple (But Complete) Guide 5. Check indexability issues Google's search results come from its index, a database of hundreds of billions of web pages. If your page is not indexed in this index, it has no chance of appearing in search results. It's also important to

exclude pages from Google's index that have no value to searchers, as this can cause SEO issues. Indexing issues are quite complex, but basic issues can be checked fairly easily. First, check your site audit 's Indexability report for any "Noindex page" warnings. Google won't be able to index pages with this warning, so it's worth checking that this isn't the page you want indexed. If so, remove or edit the meta robots tag . Next, check the number of indexable URLs in the same report. If this seems unusually high, investigate further. For example, considering that there are only about 500 published blog articles, the number of URLs that can be indexed on the Ahrefs blog is 2,164, which seems like a lot. However, if you click on this number, you will see that it is because it includes other language versions of our blog. If you exclude these pages, as well as author, category, and pagination pages, the number of indexable URLs is about the same.
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