{"id":42492,"date":"2017-05-02T04:00:30","date_gmt":"2017-05-02T11:00:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/blog\/?p=42492"},"modified":"2019-07-25T10:20:44","modified_gmt":"2019-07-25T17:20:44","slug":"google-mobile-first-seo-strategy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/blog\/google-mobile-first-seo-strategy\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Know If You’re at Risk When Google Switches to a Mobile-First Index (Flowchart)"},"content":{"rendered":"
I\u2019d like to put your minds at ease. Or alert you to an upcoming risk. I guess we’ll see which camp you’re in.<\/p>\n
Over the course of the year, Google is going to turn up the dial on its mobile-first index<\/i>. What\u2019s that? Google is moving toward analyzing and ranking the mobile version of websites and not the desktop version<\/i>, as they do now.<\/p>\n
Exactly when the switch will be is 100% a mystery. Gary Illyes suggested it could be in 2018<\/a>. Yet, we know that Google rolls out algorithm and infrastructure changes gradually and with plenty of testing. We are likely witnessing mobile-first SERPs today to some degree.<\/p>\n With the switch to a mobile-first index, you’ll either be in good shape or you’re going to feel the pain of a major loss in organic search traffic.<\/b><\/p>\n As an SEO services<\/a> company, we are busy doing risk assessments for clients and identifying exactly how ready a website is for the mobile-first index.<\/p>\n To help you get a sense of how prepared you are for a Google index that’s focused on the mobile website experience, we created a decision tree to assess a website as low risk or high risk. For a refresher on how to satisfy a mobile searcher, take a look at our SEO Guide<\/a> step on Mobile SEO and UX Optimization<\/a>.<\/p>\n What does your path to mobile-first index readiness look like? Here\u2019s what we look for when we do a mobile-first readiness analysis of a client\u2019s site.<\/p>\n