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More and more often I see pages of renowned national newspapers

Posted: Mon Jan 06, 2025 10:13 am
by mayaboti
2. Supplementary Content Supplemental or secondary content is, according to Google , anything that “does not directly help the page fulfill its purpose.” By exclusion, secondary content is everything that does not fall within the main content or ads: sitebar contents, navigation links, newsletter subscription banners, comments, etc. Secondary content affects the quality of the page to the extent that it contributes to a good user experience . In other words, this part of the page must not interfere or affect the quality of navigation and must not prevent users from using the page correctly (especially from mobile).


A reasoning very similar to what is done on ads, as we bahamas phone data will see now. 3. Ads Let's start with the good news. In itself, the presence of ads or sponsored content does not negatively affect the quality of the page. Did you breathe a big sigh of relief? Well, I'll stop you right now. In the Guidelines Google specifies very well that the website is in any case considered responsible for the quality of the ads shown , even if it does not directly control the content of the ads.


Let's take an example. with a section of sponsored links where very low-grade stuff is inserted, evidently spammy or clickbait. Articles like "Look how this woman from Cagliari became a millionaire in six months", so to speak. Here, ads of this kind probably influence the overall quality judgment of the content. Google also condemns all those ads that can "distract" from the main content, i.