How to manage the table of contents analysis?

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Irfanabdulla1111
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Joined: Mon Dec 23, 2024 3:42 am

How to manage the table of contents analysis?

Post by Irfanabdulla1111 »

Each row contains information about a page on your site, a post.

Note that at the very bottom you have the “Show More” button, which will add more posts to the table.

The different metrics appear in the column headers.

Since it has many columns, not all the values ​​can be displayed on the screen, so at the bottom you have a bar to scroll the columns.

Just above the table header you have the “Manage columns” button.

There you can select which columns you want to display so you can manage the information more easily.

For a first look, I recommend leaving all columns selected. You can then select the ones that interest you based on what you want to analyze.

Note that you can sort the data as you like by clicking on the table header, in any of the columns.

For example, if you click on the “Content Update on” column, the posts will appear sorted starting with the one that has not been updated the longest.

The same thing happens if you click on the header of any other column.

Let's see point by point what the information in each column means.

First data section

Starting from the right, the table presents the following options:

URL: The URL of your site whose data is displayed in that row

WorkFlow STATUS: If you haven’t used Content Analyzer, it will say “Not Analyzed.” The information in this section is not provided by the tool, so you have to add it yourself! This is the space to add your notes with pending tasks. Later on I will explain how to configure it and how to take advantage of it.

Content Update on: last update date of that post

Status Code: Displays the server response code when displaying that page.

Title: The SEO title of the post

Metadescription: The meta description of the post.

In this first section of data you already have information to operate.

The actions to be taken are:
Update older posts: You already know that Google wants fresh, up-to-date content.

Correct any status errors. The “Status Code” should always be “200”. If you see any row where the status starts with 3 or 4, it means there are errors when displaying that page. Be careful with that! Any errors here must be corrected immediately.

Optimize titles and meta descriptions to improve SEO: Check length and KWs.

Second data section

Content Analysis - Header 2
H1: The title of the post.

Author: the author of the post. This is a very helpful column if your site has multiple auth email database list ors, as it will allow you to easily see which ones get the best results with their content.

Words: the number of words in the post.

Shares: the number of times it has been shared on social networks.

Backlinks: The number of times your content has been linked to.

In this section you can see what content is being shared and how many times each post has been linked to.
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