Creating Mobile Friendly Content: A Hitlist
Time to Read: 4m 7s
The discussion about how traffic is trending toward mobile users is a thing of the past. We’re there. Mobile surpassed desktop traffic back in 2015 and in internet time, that’s eons. Since then, Google has introduced mobile first indexing and the tides have seriously shifted in favor of optimizing toward the mobile experience. It’s time to start crafting our content to follow suit! Mobile responsiveness and page speed certainly are topics important to this discussion but as we’re going to focus on the actual on-page content, we’ll save responsiveness and speed for another time. In summary, here are the things you need to be mindful of when crafting mobile-friendly content:
- Be Concise
- Be Organized
- Use Optimized Images
- Don’t forget to test!
Be Concise
Have you opened a page only to find a wall of text? I’ll guess your first thought was, “NOPE,” and you promptly navigated away from said wall. Being concise means taking Marie Kondo’s advice and cutting down the clutter. Say what needs to be said, and use the copy necessary to effectively say it. Remember, in SEO it is important to have rich, informative, and robust copy on the page. Don’t compromise your SEO by gutting the page’s copy thinking you’re being brief. Marcia Riefer Johnston gave the following advice: “Concise does not mean short. Short tells us nothing. Like a piece of string, text should be as long as necessary. Concise does not mean robospeak, as in “push button” instead of “push the button.” Keep the the. Concise does not mean gutted for mobile. Don’t think, “Smartphone users won’t need that.” They will. Concise means minimal: enough to meet your audience’s needs and accomplish your purpose. No more, no less.” Understand that skimming is a popular way readers consume content. Utilize headlines and summaries to start things off, then include your full post. A helpful rule: Use short words and fewer idioms to make your content more mobile-friendly. They take up space. Use single word substitutes for often used, wordier phrases. Here’s a helpful link to use: Use simple words and phrasesBe Organized
Good mobile content is well-curated content. A word commonly used to describe this is “chunky.” This means to break up the content into manageable chunks. There are many ways to make content chunky, but some simple suggestions are:- Headings
- Subheadings
- Bulleted lists
- Images
- Whitespace