I am working on my first full stack javascript application using specifically mean.js as my start point, and I have started to become nervous and somewhat confused around the issue of search engine optimization (SEO).
Has Googles recent efforts (within last year or so), to improve javascript crawling rendered this a non issue, or is this something I need to take account of in the planning and structuring of my project?
If Google can crawl AngularJS/Ajax heavy applications now, why are we getting blog posts about solutions to the SEO issue: http://blog.meanjs.org/post/78474995741/mean-seo
I know questions about SEO and AngularJS have been asked before, but there seems to be so many differing opinions on this issue that I am lost, and it would be nice to have some thoughts that are more mean.js specific. My major worries are:
If you are rendering the majority of your content using a JavaScript, then yes, it becomes a search engine black hole. That's one of the big downsides of a thick client application. If you need high visibility by search engines, it's a challenge. There is a middle ground.
You'll need a combination of server side rendering and client side rendering. When the page first loads, it should have all the visible content the user needs, or at least the content that appears "above the fold" (at the top of the page). Links should be descriptive and allow search engines to dive deeper into the site. Your site's main menu should be delivered with the web page as well giving search engines something to bite into.
Content below the fold, or paginated content can be pulled in dynamically and rendered on the client using any JavaScript framework. This gives you a good mix of server side rendering to feed search engines, and the performance boost that pulling content in dynamically can offer.
well you'll need to be worried about the public face of your site you shouldn't be considered anything behind a log-in screen, to me the snapshot with a headless browser approach using the farment_scape seems is the way to go, it's the one that will consume less time and as you looked at mean-seo isn't that hard to implement.
take a look to this question, there are some answers about how to creates links on the pages to be SEO friendly, almost all the recent posts fit together one to each other.
https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/174992?hl=en
and also try to register to https://webmasters.stackexchange.com/ you'll find more about seo
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With