Post by account_disabled on Feb 22, 2024 4:46:57 GMT -5
The snippets over characters Its hard to see from this graph but they maxed out at characters. In some cases Google is appending their own information While the entire snippet is characters the Jump... link is added by Google. The rest of the snippet is characters long. Google also adds result counts and dates to the front of some snippets. These characters dont seem to count against the limit but its a bit hard to tell because we dont have a lot of data points. Do metas even matter Before we reveal the new limit heres an uncomfortable question when it seems like.
Google is rewriting so many snippets is it worth having meta America Mobile Number List description tags at all Across the data set we were able to successfully capture original Meta Description tags in many of the remaining cases the sites simply didnt define one. Of those just over onethird . were used asis for display snippets. Keep in mind though that Google truncates some of these and appends extra data to some. In . of cases Google used the original meta description tag but added some text. This number may seem high but most of these cases were simply Google adding a period to the end of the snippet. Apparently Google is a stickler for complete sentences. So now were up to . of cases where either the display snippet perfectly matched the meta description tag or fully contained it.
What about cases where the display snippet used a truncated version of the meta description tag Just . of snippets matched this scenario. Putting it all together were up to almost of cases where Google is using all or part of the original meta description tag. This number is probably low as were not counting cases where Google used part of the original meta description but modified it in some way. Its interesting to note that in some cases Google.
Google is rewriting so many snippets is it worth having meta America Mobile Number List description tags at all Across the data set we were able to successfully capture original Meta Description tags in many of the remaining cases the sites simply didnt define one. Of those just over onethird . were used asis for display snippets. Keep in mind though that Google truncates some of these and appends extra data to some. In . of cases Google used the original meta description tag but added some text. This number may seem high but most of these cases were simply Google adding a period to the end of the snippet. Apparently Google is a stickler for complete sentences. So now were up to . of cases where either the display snippet perfectly matched the meta description tag or fully contained it.
What about cases where the display snippet used a truncated version of the meta description tag Just . of snippets matched this scenario. Putting it all together were up to almost of cases where Google is using all or part of the original meta description tag. This number is probably low as were not counting cases where Google used part of the original meta description but modified it in some way. Its interesting to note that in some cases Google.