Tags continue to generate debate in the SEO world. Get things right from the start to avoid chaos. If it's too late, start cleaning up.
Carlos Bravo5
The eternal debate among SEOs. Do tags help or hurt? Some people don't bother with it at all, and others use them wisely. There is no global solution, but in this case the most appropriate answer would be "it depends."
Don't know what blog post tags are? Read this article first before reading on.
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Before I started writing this post I already knew that other bloggers had covered the topic in depth and that I might not have much to add. In the end I remembered the fact that you can add value to the reader japan phone number list free by adding and summarizing existing content. I prefer not to go into depth about the different options proposed by the different authors. This way you can read the posts in detail because they deserve your attention.
I have my own love-hate story with tags. In my last annual blog analysis I identified tags as a possible culprit for the drop in traffic I had from Google during 2014. As a result I stopped indexing them to see if this had an impact on rankings. Then the traffic continued to drop. I waited a couple of months to see if the effect was temporary. Since things didn't improve I re-indexed them and the traffic rose again to previous levels.
Avoid having to do a deep cleaning by keeping things tidy
This is probably the best advice you can get. Don't create chaos in your blog by creating labels just the way they come to mind and avoid what Google calls Thin Content . If you are a hippieblogger like me who doesn't care much about SEO and is very lazy about the subject, this can end up hurting you at some point. I don't recommend following in my footsteps . I started when the rules of the game were different.