You can now export hourly data for the past 24-hours from Google Search Console’s performance report. A month ago, Google added the new 24-hour view to the performance reports, but there was no easy way to export that data to other platforms, now there is.
Exporting. Google announced on social that you can now export the data, I tested it, and yes, it exports the past 24-hours of data, hour by hour.
Google wrote, “Last month we announced the 24 hour view in the Search Console Performance reports, and we got lots of positive feedback and feature requests. Today, we’re making the export button available for that view (one of the most requested features): the ability to export data on an hourly basis for the last 24 hours. Enjoy the new data!”
Google then shared this screenshot showing you can export this data to Google Sheets, Microsoft Excel or CSV format:
Why we care. Being able to use the data outside of the web interface in Google Search Console can be super helpful when trying to debug and discover new insights. While you can only export this data for the past 24 hours, it can still be useful to see this data come in, in almost real time, from Google Search Console. That being said, the more recent data is not always the final data that Google shows, so reviewing the data again may be important, depending on what reports you are trying to generate.
Keep an eye on this data, validate it against the other exports, and see how you can use it to improve your site and content over time.
https://i0.wp.com/dubadosolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/google-search-console-export-24-hours-7BiHQk.jpeg?fit=1880%2C1174&ssl=111741880http://dubadosolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/dubado-logo-1.png2025-01-07 12:56:222025-01-07 12:56:22Google Search Console performance report 24-hour view now can be exported
There’s no shortage of companies competing for your link building budget, especially since a 2024 Google leak reaffirmed the critical importance of links.
But there are also an overwhelming number of generic articles listing the “best” link building agencies or offering endless lists of questions to ask a potential agency.
With so many options and questionable players in the SEO industry, it’s no surprise that many people have had one – or even several – bad experiences.
Ready to find out how to avoid your next SEO mishap and find the best link building agency – based on your needs?
We will. But first, a little about me.
I’m Travis Bliffen, the CEO of Stellar SEO, a 2024 Inc. 5000 fastest-growing link building agency. We’ve been around since 2012 and have built tens of thousands of links across many challenging industries.
Based on my first-hand experience – and numerous conversations with customers who sought us out after choosing the wrong link building partner – here’s what I’ve learned.
What makes a link building service “good”?
If you decide to outsource link building, you need to check with a potential partner agency about whether:
The links they build effectively boost rankings without creating more risk than you are comfortable with.
Their approach, beliefs, and strategies align with your internal expectations.
While the link building process can become complex, link building is elementary.
Focus on strategies to encourage high-quality websites to link to you more frequently than to your competitors. Your link building agency’s creativity directly impacts the quantity and quality of links you can secure.
The importance of aligning expectations with reality
If you’re ready to entrust link building to an outside agency, ensure your expectations are rooted in reality.
It’s easy to get swept up by promises of quick fixes or dramatic ranking boosts. However, SEO is rarely that simple.
A solid link building agency will have to:
Analyze your website and your business goals.
Perform competitor analysis.
Create a link building plan.
Work with writers who will create your content.
Work with an outreach team to find guest posting or link placement opportunities.
Ensure quality control and review.
Given the amount of work put into every link, a quality link building company can be costly. This is why you should focus on the desired business outcome, not just vanity metrics.
What is the desired outcome from the link placements? Is your primary goal to generate referral traffic through link building? If so, that requires a different approach than links to boost organic traffic to key pages.
What internal criteria does your team have? Some companies have a list of must-haves in any potential link placement. If your team has preferences, sharing these upfront will help the agency match you with the appropriate campaign type.
How do you weigh risk vs. cost? A successful link building campaign should deliver a return on investment (ROI), though the timeline can vary. For instance, paid link campaigns often have a lower cost per link and deliver ROI more quickly compared to content marketing-based link earning. Both approaches can be effective, but it’s important to choose the one that fits your budget and comfort level.
Decide your goals and discuss them openly with your potential link building partner early. Otherwise, you will waste your time and money.
What to look for in a link building agency: More than just a pitch
Every agency will tell you it’s the best in the business. Your job is to determine which can back up their claims with substance.
To do that, you’ll need to know what questions to ask — and how to interpret the answers.
1. What’s your approach to link building?
A good link building company will be highly specific about its services and process. Its representatives must articulate their strategies clearly and explain how they plan to implement them to help your website.
This can include content-driven digital PR, outreach campaigns, and link magnets.
Vague or overly technical answers are a red flag.
2. How do you measure success?
Look for companies that mention concrete indicators of ROI, such as:
Organic traffic improvement.
Keyword rankings growth.
Conversions.
We get regular inquiries from companies looking to boost their DA (Domain Authority) or DR (Domain Rating). We first tell them that that’s a terrible reason to hire a link building agency.
Due to acquiring excellent links, DA, DR, and other metrics will improve over time. However, having a clear strategy to generate traffic and leads during the process will increase your campaign ROI exponentially.
3. How do you control link quality?
A trustworthy link building company will have set standards for the links it provides. Not all links must come from high-DR websites, but the company must provide relevant links in your niche.
With backlinks, quality trumps quantity.
Talk to the link building service about their screening process and any guaranteed checks or minimum metrics their links will meet. More importantly, ask them how to determine those standards and how your niche could impact the thresholds.
4. What will the reporting process look like?
If you’re outsourcing link building services, you must know what reports you can expect. Ask about the frequency of the reports, the kind of data you’ll see, and the company’s policy if the links don’t meet the agreed-upon metrics.
There is no right or wrong answer to this; you just need to determine if they will report what is important to you. If it isn’t part of their default reporting, ask if they can add it to your reports.
Spotting the red flags
Unfortunately, you’ll find that many shady actors call themselves a link building company, only to offer you personal blogging networks, link farms, and other harmful SEO practices. Here are some common warning signs:
Too-good-to-be-true promises: It’s impossible to guarantee search engine rankings – there are too many factors affecting your position on Google. Any agency that promises guaranteed rankings or instant success is a sham.
Low prices with big promises: High-quality link building requires the work of an entire team, plus often fees that many quality websites demand. If the link building company fee is suspiciously low, you’re probably paying for harmful, risky/spammy practices.
Evasive answers: An agency that can’t clearly explain its link building techniques or dodges your questions is probably best kept far from your business.
Building a partnership that works
Digital marketing is more than just a one-and-done process.
You will likely need to cooperate with the link building company for years – links die, and your website will stop giving you the necessary “juice.” In fact, 74.5% of links were lost in the previous nine years, according to Ahrefs.
That’s why you need to find someone who has been in the link building business for a long time and can maintain long-term partnerships. Focus on:
Communication: Responsiveness is one sign of how much the company will prioritize your account. If it’s slow to respond or unwilling to provide clear updates, it might be a sign to look elsewhere.
Tangible results: Ensure you see measurable outcomes, such as improved rankings, traffic, and conversions. Here is an example.
A real estate investor contacted Stellar SEO after getting hit by a Google helpful content update. We recovered his site traffic and 5Xed monthly visitors, significantly boosting motivated seller leads.
Transparency: Demand transparency in reporting, quality control, fee structure, and any other aspect of work.
Trust, but verify to find the best link building service
Look for a link building agency that:
Understands your niche.
Has the right strategy.
Measures its success using relevant metrics.
Finding the right link building services isn’t about the cheapest option or the instant success. It’s about finding a team that has carried its clients through years of Google updates – and one you can see yourself working with for the next few years.
Stellar SEO has an average client retention time of more than five years for direct clients. We also partner with several great digital marketing agencies that love our flexible white-label link building services.
While high-quality backlinks are only part of the equation for SEO success, they carry significant weight, making them a sound investment in 2025.
https://i0.wp.com/dubadosolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/StellarSEO-20250107-header-IgWa9t.jpeg?fit=1920%2C1080&ssl=110801920http://dubadosolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/dubado-logo-1.png2025-01-07 12:00:002025-01-07 12:00:00How to find the best link building service for you by Stellar SEO
Cut+Dry, a major ecommerce platform for foodservice distributors and manufacturers, is integrating Instacart’s Carrot Ads technology to unlock new advertising revenue streams and connect brands with buyers at the point of sale.
Food manufacturers have long faced challenges in influencing purchasing decisions in foodservice. This partnership bridges that gap, empowering brands to engage buyers directly while opening new revenue opportunities for distributors.
What’s happening:
Cut+Dry will integrate Carrot Ads, Instacart’s ad tech platform, allowing food manufacturers to advertise directly to operators and distributors.
The move expands digital advertising into the foodservice space, which has historically been underrepresented in online marketing.
Distributors gain additional revenue streams by hosting ads, while manufacturers boost brand awareness and sales.
Key benefits:
For manufacturers: Direct access to buyers with more influence at the point of sale.
For distributors: New ad revenue and greater engagement with operators.
Why we care. This integration provides a new avenue to reach decision-makers in the multi-billion dollar foodservice industry, where traditional advertising channels have limited reach. The partnership creates a scalable, measurable ad platform that connects brands to a previously untapped audience in foodservice distribution.
What they’re saying. Mani Kulasooriya, CEO of Cut+Dry, said:
“By integrating Instacart’s advertising capabilities with our platform, we’re creating one of the largest digital ad opportunities in foodservice.”
What’s next. Carrot Ads on Cut+Dry will be available over the next few quarters, giving brands new avenues to reach the multi-billion dollar foodservice market. Instacart will expand its Carrot Ads partnerships, further bridging the gap between retail and foodservice industries.
Bottom line. This partnership taps into the growing foodservice market, driving growth for brands and distributors alike while establishing new digital ad opportunities in an evolving industry.
Google will update its cryptocurrency and related products policy this month, refining the rules for advertising crypto-related services in the United Kingdom.
As the crypto industry grows, clearer advertising rules aim to protect consumers and ensure compliance with local regulations, fostering a more transparent environment.
What’s changing:
Beginning Jan. 15, advertisers offering cryptocurrency exchanges targeting the UK must meet specific requirements and obtain certification from Google.
Ads for cryptocurrency exchanges and wallets will only be permitted if the advertiser is registered with the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).
Hardware wallet ads are allowed, but they must strictly provide storage services without engaging in trading, selling, or exchanging assets.
Certification requirements:
Advertisers must comply with all local legal requirements and secure Google’s certification to promote their products.
Non-compliance with these rules may lead to ad disapproval or account suspension.
Why we care. Crypto businesses targeting the UK can now reach audiences through Google Ads, provided they adhere to FCA regulations and Google’s certification process.
This update opens opportunities for regulated crypto firms while ensuring consumer protection through vetted advertisers.
What’s next:
Google’s policy update will apply globally to all advertisers offering financial products targeting the UK.
Advertisers are encouraged to review and pursue certification before Jan. 15 to avoid disruptions.
Bottom line. Google’s updated policy reflects its commitment to aligning with financial regulations, creating a safer ecosystem for crypto advertising while supporting compliant businesses.
For example, when summer sales dropped, they scheduled customer calls. The feedback was clear:
“We love the blanket, but we’re sweating. It’s in storage until winter.” – Aaron Spivak
That single insight led to their breakthrough “ice fabric” technology, which:
Raised $1M on Kickstarter
Sold 3,000 units in 72 hours
Became their highest-margin product
The entrepreneurs continued talking to customers to inform product development.
“When people ask what our marketing hack is or which agency we worked with, they miss the point. We had 3,000 people on the phone tell us exactly what they wanted. That’s the real secret.” – Aaron Spivak
How to Have Customer Conversations
It’s easy to overthink product research. But Hush proved that you just need to begin talking to customers.
Here’s a simple process to get started:
Send a brief email with a link for a 15-minute call. The Hush team found this approach got better responses than long surveys or complicated feedback forms.
Approach each conversation with genuine curiosity. Don’t defend your products or explain your constraints. Just listen. Ask what their perfect product would look like. Follow interesting threads that emerge.
Start with five customers this week. That’s enough to spot patterns while being totally manageable. Even if you’re swamped, you can find 75 minutes for conversations that could transform your business.
Take detailed notes using their exact words. In addition to product ideas, you can get feedback points and marketing content.
The goal is to build such deep customer understanding that product failures become nearly impossible.
You may not remember product specs, but you likely recall Sara Blakely cutting the feet off her pantyhose to create Spanx. Or Patagonia’s founder testing gear on mountain expeditions.
Most brands miss by showing only the highlight reel—the wins, the perfect moments, and the polished content.
Telling raw, relatable stories is how you build a lasting brand.
How Mid Day Squares Built a $20M Chocolate Empire Through Storytelling
In 2018, Jake Karls and his co-founders launched Mid Day Squares with a radical commitment to transparency.
They documented everything about building the company—from production line disasters to legal battles to funding negotiations.
Mid Day Sqaures unconventional approach involved:
Sharing the entrepreneurial journey, not just the product (85-90% of content)
Showing behind-the-scenes wins and failures
Filming raw, unscripted moments
“When people ask what’s our marketing hack or which agency we worked with, they’re missing the point. Building in public and sharing our authentic story turned customers into fans who felt like they were buying from friends.” – Jake Karls
Mid Day Squares grew to over $20 million in revenue. And Jake attributes much of their success to creative content.
But brand storytelling isn’t just for founder-led content.
How TBH Skincare Makes Customer-Focused Content
When Rachel Wilde started TBH Skincare, she took a different approach to content marketing.
In addition to founder stories, she created content on real customer experiences. It focused on honest education about acne treatment.
“I always say start with the customer. Understand what they want, and hit them with the right with the right message in the right place at the right time.” – Rachel Wilde
This customer-first storytelling shaped every aspect of their content, including:
Focusing on raw, unfiltered customer results
Creating educational content that destigmatizes acne
TBH Skincare grew to $14M ($22M AUD) in four years.
How to Start Creating Engaging Stories
Before investing in content, identify what makes your brand relatable. Here are some best practices to get started:
Document your “why.” Beyond making money, what drives your company? What change are you trying to create?
Choose your storytelling lane. Will you focus on founder content? Customer stories? Educational content? Pick an approach that plays to your strengths and resonates with your audience.
Start small but consistent. You don’t need fancy equipment or a full content team. Both Mid Day Squares and TBH Skincare started with iPhones and posted daily while staying true to their story.
Test and iterate. Track which stories resonate deeply. Look for patterns in engagement and sales attribution. Double down on what works.
“Most brands create different content for each marketing channel. We just document our journey and then adapt those stories for different platforms. It’s more authentic and way more efficient.” – Jake Karls
The TBH Skincare team has found authentic stories outperform traditional ads across every channel.
“When you have a piece of content that really resonates with people, you can use it everywhere. Our best-performing ads weren’t planned campaigns—they were real moments we captured and then amplified.” – Rachel Wilde
The lesson?
View storytelling as the key to better marketing. It’ll boost all your other channels.
3. Optimize Search Marketing (Paid and Organic)
Every day, billions of people tell Google exactly what they want to buy. Capturing this traffic isn’t cheap or easy—but it’s steady.
Paid search gives instant traffic but needs constant investment. Organic search is free but takes time to build up. Together, they drive consistent sales.
“The key is perfect alignment. Your keyword matches the intent, your ad matches the keyword, and your landing page matches the ad. No disconnects.” – Dan Turner
Here’s exactly what they changed:
Built granular campaigns: Instead of lumping everything together, they created separate campaigns for each product category. Every campaign got its own custom landing page and clear conversion path.
Implemented systematic testing: Every ad needed a minimum of 5,000 impressions before making decisions. Proper budget allocation for each test. Regular creative refreshes.
The result?
A consistent 10x return on ad spend (ROAS).
How to Make the Most Out of Your Google Ads Campaigns
Before you spend a dollar on ads, understand your profit. Then, analyzing your competitors and keyword research follows.
Calculate Your Campaign Profitability
Work out how much you can spend to get a customer while making a profit. Without this calculation, you risk burning your ad budget on dud campaigns.
To avoid this mistake, note three metrics:
Target cost per click (CPC)
Expected conversion rate
Maximum customer acquisition cost (CAC)
Here’s an example of the math:
Product price: $100
Profit margin: 50% (meaning you make $50 per sale)
Target ROAS: 3:1 (for every $1 spent on ads, you want $3 in revenue)
Expected conversion rate: 2% (2 out of 100 visitors buy)
The maximum CAC calculation is $50 profit ÷ 3 = $16.67 maximum ad spend per customer. With a 2% conversion rate, you can’t spend over $16.67 to acquire a customer while keeping campaigns profitable.
Do Keyword Research
Keyword research answers a simple question: are people searching for what you’re selling?
Start by Googling your products to see what ads are displaying.
For example, here’s what the ads look like for “pendulum lights.”
There are lots of ads, which implies they’re working.
You could theoretically follow this simple process of Googling, observing, and copying.
But, to reduce wasted budget, use a tool like Semrush. It’ll help you understand the demand and cost for profitable keywords.
Helpful content on your product and category pages
Core technical optimization
Test everything. Double down on what works. Cut what doesn’t.
Every dollar should drive immediate sales (paid) or build long-term assets (organic).
4. Turn Email Into Sustainable Sales
The top brands drive 30-50% of their revenue through email marketing.
These email programs succeed by connecting three foundations we’ve covered:
Products customers want (Strategy #1)
Authentic storytelling (Strategy #2)
Steady website traffic (Strategy #3)
But there’s a fourth element that ties everything together: systematic execution.
Let’s explore how to build an email program that turns subscribers into customers—and customers into repeat buyers.
Note: The best practices I’m about to share are inspired by Boyuan Zhao, an email and SMS consultant for Shopify brands. I recommend checking out his free four-hour training on YouTube. It’s some of the best content I’ve seen on email marketing.
Build a Quality Email List
Your email list isn’t just a number.
“Most brands obsess over list size. But I’ve found that smaller, engaged lists consistently outperform massive, unengaged ones.” – Boyuan Zhao
Large lists built through aggressive tactics (giveaways, lead magnets, etc.) often convert at 1-2%.
Meanwhile, carefully grown lists using targeted pop-ups and organic signups can hit 8-15% conversion rates.
The math is simple:
100,000 subscribers at 1% = 1,000 customers
20,000 engaged subscribers at 10% = 2,000 customers
Plus, better engagement means higher deliverability. Which means more of your emails actually reach inboxes.
Start by optimizing your signup forms:
Test different offers (10% off vs. free shipping)
Use clear value propositions
Target exit intent to capture interested visitors
Avoid generic “Subscribe to our newsletter” messaging
You likely have a decent welcome series, abandoned cart emails, and a newsletter.
But to hit 50% attributed revenue to email, you need to think differently.
There are two shifts you need to make this happen.
Shift #1: Methodically Test Your Campaigns
“The brands consistently driving 50% of revenue through email aren’t doing anything revolutionary. They’re just incredibly systematic about execution.” – Boyuan Zhao
This means:
Testing one element at a time
Tracking actual revenue (not just opens and clicks)
Making small, continuous improvements
The results compound over time.
Shift #2: Simplify Your Automations
How many emails are in your sequences?
Probably too many.
“I’ve found that a well-executed 3-email sequence often outperforms complex 10-email flows. It’s not about the number of touchpoints. It’s about delivering the right message at the right time.” – Boyuan Zhao
Instead of building complex automations, focus on the fundamentals:
First impression (welcome)
Purchase intent (cart abandonment)
Post-purchase experience (reviews)
Reactivation (win-back)
Weave authentic brand storytelling into your automations and relentlessly test, test, test.
Do this, and you’re well on your way to more sales.
5. Optimize Operations for Profit (Free Calculator)
Even if you have winning products and amazing marketing, you can fail if your operations suck.
How Who Is Elijah Learned the True Cost of Growth
In 2023, founders Raquel and Adam Bouris of fragrance brand Who Is Elijah learned two expensive lessons about business.
First, their discovery set promotion seemed like a slam dunk: sell fragrance samples for $1 plus shipping.
They sold 6,000 sets in 24 hours.
“Sales looked great because thousands and thousands a week were going out.” – Adam Bouris
But the math told a different story.
Customers paid $1 plus $10 shipping. The actual shipping cost was $7-12 per unit. Add production, logistics, and overhead costs.
The result?
A 60% loss on every order. Ouch.
“We would’ve been better off turning the website off.” – Adam Bouris
Meanwhile, their team had grown from 28 to 44 people, but profits weren’t following.
Their initial approach followed conventional wisdom:
Hire department heads from big corporations
Build specialized teams for every function
Add headcount to solve anticipated problems
Despite growing revenue, operational costs were suffocating the business.
“One of the biggest problems founders make is they worry about the now instead of what’s on the other side of that decision. We were hiring people to fix problems six months away. That’s so stupid.” – Adam Bouris
Who Is Elijah made a complete operational reset, including two critical changes:
Fixed unit economics:
Stopped money-losing promotions
Calculated true cost per order
Built proper financial forecasting
Optimized team structure:
Cut their team from 44 to 21 people
Moved full-time specialists to agencies
Simplified internal processes
Built systems
Profitability improved. They also became more agile and innovative.
“I learned how to be a CFO the hard way, but I’m glad that I went through the pain.” – Adam Bouris
How to Build Better Operations
You can build efficient operations without an MBA or years of corporate experience. It starts with digging into four areas.
1. Understand Your Unit Economics
To understand your profitability create a system for tracking your unit economics.
Start with the three numbers that matter most:
1. Revenue per order
Average order value
Shipping revenue
Any other fees
2. Direct costs per order
Product cost
Shipping cost
Packaging cost
Payment processing fees
3. Operating costs per order
Marketing spend ÷ number of orders
Platform fees
Customer service time
Storage/warehouse costs
Here’s a basic calculator to help:
[CALCULATOR]
This is a starting point. The rest of your numbers (tools, complex calculations, etc.) can come later.
Pro tip: Use a tool like Cin7 to automate this tracking. The investment pays for itself by identifying profit leaks.
2. Build Systems, Not Band-Aids
When problems arise, the tendency is to:
Hire someone to fix it
Create a quick workaround
Ignore it until it becomes a crisis
Instead, step back and design systems that prevent future issues.
Start with your three most time-consuming processes, e.g., order fulfillment, customer services, and inventory management.
For each process:
Document exactly how it’s done now
Identify bottlenecks and failure points
Create standard operating procedures (SOPs)
Build quality control checkpoints
Add automation where possible
3. Optimize Your Supply Chain
Your supply chain impacts everything: cash flow, customer satisfaction, and profitability. Here’s how to optimize it:
First, map your current supply chain:
List all suppliers and their lead times (it’s essential to have 2nd and 3rd options)
Document shipping carriers and costs
Track inventory levels and turnover
Identify quality control points
Note payment terms and minimums
Then, negotiate better terms. Here’s an email template:
We’ve been working together for [X months/years] and have purchased [$ amount] of inventory during this time. I’d like to discuss ways we can grow our partnership.
The “Page with redirect” error in Google Search Console shows a page on your website is redirected to a different URL when the user or Googlebot attempts to access the URL.
This means all the pages listed in the report are not showing in search results.
Nothing new, right?
At first glance, this error in Google Search Console may not seem like the “nectar of the gods.”
But after reading through 138 questions in the Search Console Help community and seeing that Stack Exchange saw 278 views on a similar question, I realize there are probably many SEO professionals who would leave their entire life fortunes to solve this issue if they could.
In the name of very serious SEO needs, I had to investigate.
How do I fix ‘Page with redirect’ in Google Search Console?
1. Manually review all the pages flagged in the report
First, I manually reviewed all the pages flagged in the Google Search Console “Page with redirect” report.
To access the report, go to Google Search Console > Pages > and look under the section “Why pages aren’t indexed.”
Once in the report, I look for two things:
Is the chart rising?
Was the last crawl date recent?
If you answered yes, I recommend exporting the data to Google Sheets, Excel, or CSV to analyze further.
2. Determine if redirects are OK
Once you export the redirect file, you must determine if the redirects are OK.
Redirects are OK in two scenarios:
Permanent move: If you permanently move a URL to a new destination, a 301 redirect is ideal to maintain its value.
Broken links: If you were fixing a broken link to a relevant webpage, this redirect is OK.
If you audit all the redirects on this list and decide all the redirects listed are accurate and intentional, you can stop reading. You are done.
I recommend revisiting this report monthly and doing a deep dive every quarter.
3. Conduct a sampling of URLs using the Inspect tool
If you want to gut-check yourself, choose a sampling of 10-25 URLs from your export list to test in the Inspect URL tool in Google Search Console.
When inspecting the URLs, you’re looking to see if the status states, “Page is not indexed: Page with redirect.”
Also, the user-declared canonical tag should be the URL you created the 301 redirect to.
4. If redirects are a problem
There are a few scenarios where redirects become a problem.
302 redirects: If your 302 redirects are truly meant to be temporary (meaning less than a month or so), you can keep them. However, eventually, Google treats 302 redirects as 301 permanent redirects. When this happens, it can negatively impact rankings.
Too many redirects: If you notice redirect chains or loops, meaning URL A goes to URL B, then URL C, to get to its final destination of URL D, you will want to go back and create redirects for URL A, B, and C to point to the final destination of URL D.
Redirecting vital pages: If you accidentally redirected an important page, remove the redirect to avoid losing visibility in the SERPs.
5. Audit your XML sitemap
Always remember to double-check your XML sitemap. You want to ensure there are no redirects listed in the XML sitemap.
If redirects are listed in the XML sitemap, remove them.
Also, make sure the page you redirected the old URL to is listed in the XML sitemap.
You can filter submitted and unsubmitted pages from your XML sitemap in Google Search Console.
If you filter by submitted pages and see a list of URLs, you’ll want to remove these URLs from your XML sitemap if the redirect is accurate.
At the core of your “Page with redirect” error in Google Search Console lies a simple solution: taking a more mindful approach to your redirects and canonical tags. That’s it.
But just because it’s simple doesn’t mean it’s easy.
I run quarterly audits to review all canonical tags and redirect pages to ensure I follow proper protocol and the directives act as I want.
Plus, it’s a good habit. The fact that you’re adjusting canonical tags and implementing redirects is already a win in my book.
Even with that solid win, you, like many of us SEO professionals, still have room for improvement.
There’s nothing to fear with the ‘Page with redirect’ error in Google Search Console
Let’s be real: I’m not running to worship at the Google Gods alter to fix my “Page with redirect” error report in Google Search Console.
Nine times out of 10, there’s no action I need to take. However, moments of awe-inspiring glory have shed light on a URL that was not meant to be redirected.
The “Page with redirect” error report in Google Search Console has become a staple in my monthly SEO checklist routine.
If you have access to Google Search Console, you’re in the know now. You’re part of a community where holistic, clean, and effective SEO work is gospel.
https://i0.wp.com/dubadosolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/page-redirect-google-search-console-errors-dR9cRu.png?fit=1977%2C1376&ssl=113761977http://dubadosolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/dubado-logo-1.png2025-01-06 15:20:002025-01-06 15:20:00How to fix the ‘Page with redirect’ error in Google Search Console
We’re still in (very) early days for LLM (large language model) search, but fast-increasing user adoption is helping us draw insights on effective tactics for brands to deploy to appear in results on platforms like Perplexity, ChatGPT search, Gemini, and more.
This article looks at those tactics from a B2B lens, broken down by the following SEO initiatives:
Note that many of these tactics – but not all – should be familiar to SEOs who have experience with traditional search engines.
Content strategy
The first step toward creating effective content for LLMs is to understand the nature of user queries.
LLMs, more than traditional search engines, are host to conversational queries, like “How can I protect my business from ransomware attacks?” (where a similar Google query might be “ransomware attack protection for businesses”).
To adapt your content strategy, study the nature of the queries and create content that directly answers them. This includes conversational headings like “The best software to protect businesses from ransomware attacks.”
In B2B, where the purchase journey is longer, it’s not as simple as optimizing for product-related queries; it’s essential to incorporate educational content to ease users into the awareness and engagement stages.
When it comes to the content itself, many of the principles of traditional SEO apply – particularly the need to go both broad and deep to establish authority and relevance.
Incorporate supporting content like guides, case studies, and user testimonials.
Make sure you’re working with pillar pages linking to in-depth blogs like “How CRM helps sales teams close deals faster.”
Remember that context matters a ton for LLMs for each piece of content (no matter the format).
Optimize for nuanced, contextual responses by addressing multiple facets of a topic in the same piece.
For example, a rich blog post for a fintech company could be titled “What is embedded finance? Benefits and challenges for SaaS platforms,” with subsections for:
Benefits for startups.
Use cases in real-world scenarios.
Integration challenges and how to overcome them.
Semantic SEO
“Semantic SEO” is a relatively recent SEO initiative that means approaching content with respect to the full topic, not just keyword elements.
For example, a cloud solutions provider can use schema markup to:
Mark up product pages with “Product” schema for solutions like “Cloud Data Storage Services.”
Build authority by linking to their business profile on Wikipedia, LinkedIn, and/or Crunchbase.
Because semantic SEO widens its focus from keywords, it’s essential to optimize for diverse phrases and synonyms instead of fixating solely on exact-match keywords.
Let’s use a marketing automation platform as an example.
Along with optimizing for a primary keyword, like “lead generation software,” include synonyms and variants like “Automated lead management tools” and “B2B marketing platforms.”
At this point, technical SEO for LLMs isn’t (by my understanding) all that different than technical SEO for traditional search engines.
To increase your chances of showing up in LLM searches, tackle the following:
Data accessibility
Confirm content is crawlable and indexable by search engines and available for API integrations.
Optimize page speed and mobile performance for enhanced usability.
Structured data
Leverage structured data to signal intent and relevance clearly.
Implement detailed schema, such as “FAQPage,” “HowTo,” and “Product,” to improve how LLMs process your content.
User intent matching
Advanced SEO in both traditional search and LLMs incorporates an understanding of user intent into content.
For B2B, this content should be strategically distributed across all stages of the buyer journey: awareness, education, technical understanding of solutions, and ultimately purchase intent.
For “instant” queries, provide actionable and direct responses, formatting answers in bullet points or concise paragraphs for LLM readiness while providing links to deeper resources.
For example, a business offering AI-powered analytics can create content like: “What is predictive analytics in B2B?” and provide direct answers such as:
“Predictive analytics uses historical data to forecast future trends. For B2B, this helps identify potential leads and optimize sales strategies.”
This is perhaps the area where we see almost no difference (yet) between LLMs and traditional search engines: establishing E-E-A-T principles is critical.
To do this (if you aren’t already), make sure your owned media:
Prioritizes experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness in all content.
Includes author bios, credentials, and citations to reinforce trustworthiness.
Cites reliable sources like Gartner, Forrester, or proprietary data studies.
Builds backlinks from authoritative domains to strengthen your site’s credibility.
Gains mentions in trusted publications to improve how LLMs perceive your brand.
For example, a logistics software company could secure backlinks from:
Industry publications like Logistics Management.
Mentions in business-oriented media like TechCrunch or Forbes.
This initiative is where SEO practices diverge most widely from traditional search engines.
The way users interact with LLMs differs from how they interact with the Google search bar.
For LLM-specific content enhancements:
Focus on content that answers “People Also Ask” and conversational follow-up queries.
Experiment with creating and optimizing content designed for direct API consumption.
For example, a tech consulting firm could create a resource hub for topics like “common cloud migration questions” with detailed Q&A formats that AI can surface easily.
If user behavior continues to feature more structured, question-based queries, make sure your content is designed to answer those directly.
For example, a company specializing in ERP software can design content to appear for queries like:
“What are the best ERP solutions for mid-sized companies?”
“What is the ROI of implementing ERP software?”
Some LLMs (and we expect more to move in this direction) are multimedia-focused.
For those, rich media integration – using videos, infographics, and charts to enhance engagement and improve content retrievability – will help spur inclusion in search results.
For example, a cybersecurity firm can enhance blogs with:
Infographics summarizing “5 types of cyberattacks businesses should watch for in 2025.”
Embedded videos explaining “How our threat detection tool works in real-time.”
At this relatively early stage of LLM SEO maturity (and our understanding of it), continuous testing, measurement, and adaptation are among the most critical initiatives.
Because LLMs are in their infancy and because user behavior is changing so rapidly across the search landscape, find and regularly reference trusted sources to stay on top of trends and developments.
In 12 months, this article might look woefully outdated, so it’s best to keep your finger on the pulse to adapt quickly.
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