301 and 302 HTTP response status codes are commonly used to redirect your webpage or entire website. Here’s how to choose the right one.
The post A Guide To 301 vs 302 Redirects For SEO appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
301 and 302 HTTP response status codes are commonly used to redirect your webpage or entire website. Here’s how to choose the right one.
The post A Guide To 301 vs 302 Redirects For SEO appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Google’s John Mueller shows how page experience ranking signals can help a site rank better and why Google might ease off on using it
The post How Page Experience Ranking Factors Actually Work appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Building a Content Strategy? Watch Out for That Second Step [Rose-Colored Glasses]
Google is working on ways to show more short-form video in search results, saying it’s a clear and concise format for satisfying certain queries.
The post Google May Surface More Short-Form Video In Search Results appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Does applying schema markup to your webpages help them rank higher in Google Search?
The post Schema Markup: Is It A Google Ranking Factor? appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Can paywalls and SEO coexist? Balancing free and premium content for SEO is tough, but it’s possible for paywalled content to rank in organic search.
The post SEO For Membership Sites: Getting Around The Paywall appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
Optimizing your Facebook page is becoming more important than ever to make sure you are reaching your target market.
The post Using A Facebook Page vs Profile For Marketing Your Business appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
After Google’s first Panda Update, several sites with poor spelling and grammar saw significant ranking demotions. Coincidence? Or conspiracy theory? Let’s dive in.
The post Spelling & Grammar: Is It A Google Ranking Factor? appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
How To Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle Your Content for Improved Search Results
#BreaktheBias – How IllumiNative Founder Crystal Echo Hawk is fighting erasure of Native Americans in media
Despite a largely untold history of erasure and violence against their community, Native Americans are leading and contributing to our society everyday. The community is also growing. In the last decade, The American Indian and Alaska Native population increased from 5.2 million in 2010 to 9.7 million in 2020. Native people now make up almost 3% of the U.S. population. Yet, representation on television for Natives is still less than 1%, as of our most recent reporting.
While we continue to see gains in representation from Capitol Hill to Hollywood, expanding the narrative for Native Americans in media has a long way to go. In celebration of Women’s History Month, we spoke to Crystal Echo Hawk, founder and Executive Director of IllumiNative, and a citizen of the Pawnee Nation. She has been a powerful advocate for Native Americans, focused on amplifying the voices, stories and issues of her community in media content.
In Echo Hawk’s conversation with Nielsen’s Charlene Polite Corley, VP, Diverse Insights and Initiatives, she shares the need for an organization like IllumiNative to raise awareness in the media industry. They also discuss the influence of contemporary Native American representation in recent shows like Reservation Dogs and Rutherford Falls, on audience perceptions and understanding about Native people.
Content however, is just one aspect of representation. Echo Hawk also talks about her work to educate brands and businesses to stop the cultural appropriation in brand icons or sports mascots.
This is just a glimpse into the broader conversation at SXSW on March 12: Forget Mascots: The Native Representation TV Needs.