So we can see things like tabs or concertinas, things that show replication when there's an interaction. This means that users don't have to look through the entire history of someone's recipe and why it was that they decided to cook an apple pie because of their grandmother and how their grandmother loved apples and they fell from an apple tree, and you know all that good stuff that you always have to scroll through when you're trying to find those simple recipes on the website.
You don't have to do this to consider SEO for that page. about physician database dangers of making changes to a website. So yeah, well, maybe we want to redesign the nav. But what do we need to do as SEOs? What do we need to understand before we can say, "Yes, let's do it"? So talk to them about the risks that make them easy to make changes.
For them, they might think that just changing the wording on the button won't make any difference, but for us, we know that anchor text has some value. So how can we educate our UX designers so they understand that when they're making changes, some of them will need to go through the SEO team first? Finally, why are we always designing mobile first? Explain this to your team so they understand why you really need to look at mobile design as well as how things look on desktop, because in fact we need to see if the two are equal.
You can look at things like teaching them
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