Small bugfix 🐛 release
Living in a country with three official languages (Belgium), makes me fully aware of the issues that incorrect Hreflang tags can have on your rankings.
This update is designed to automate the process of checking a site's Hreflang tag deployment.
With this update, we take a readout of a URL's Hreflang tags and then crawl them to assess if they back reference your current URL.
This saves precious time when it comes to assessing a site's language targeting and Hreflang architecture, allowing you to get a fast and reliable impression of the status of a site's optimization for international organic search.
We all know the importance of links on your pages. So, this edition is fully focused on making you understand all the links found on any page.
Are they working, leading to a 404 page or maybe to a redirect?
We've added a new tab called "Links".
Here you can:
When highlighting all internal or external links on a page, it shows a little pop-up on the page with color coding explaining the number of links:
Highlighting of all external and internal links is also possible from the newly created contextual or "right click" menu on any page, together with the options from the right click menu to:
We'll save you seconds - dozens or hundreds of times per day - which quickly adds up.
Oh, and we've got one more trick up our sleeves...
From now on, you will get an overview of all the headings on a page, so not just the amount of H1's, H2's, etc., but also the actual headings with the option to export or copy them.
We all know that just creating content isn't enough.
Content creation is only half the battle – the rest is gaining notice.
If you want traffic and conversion, you need to make sure your content looks as sexy outside your website as it does on it.
That means having the right OG:Image tags for example.
This release shows you the Open Graph tags and Twitter Cards on any page you're on.
You might also have heard about Reddit's growing importance in the Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs).
So, we've included an easy way to see if the current URL is already shared on any subreddit. Like this, you can jump right into the discussion if the link has already been submitted.
Otherwise, a "Submit this link" is provided for a link to the Reddit submission page.
And if you're just starting out on your Reddit journey, this is also an excellent way to start building up some karma by submitting interesting content to the platform.
Big version numbers, mean big changes!
This version introduces a name change from the "Technical SEO Rich Results & Schema Validator" to "Sprout SEO."
A new name, as the extension, will be way more than just an easy way for you to handle schema markup on your website and snoop on the schema of your competitors to improve yours.
So, what else has changed with version 3.0?
Analyze the on-page SEO elements of any page and find potential issues. The on-page shows you the following:
See if you have reached the destination page via a redirect and trace the entire redirect chain, including JS redirects.
We all know the times when a client has approached you about a website migration that went wrong.
So can you recover?
How can you figure out all the old URLs easily, without putting back a backup of the website?
Well, if your website is archived on archive.org from the "other tools" section, you can now create a CSV file of all known URLs straight from archive.org so you can start building your redirect mapping and get those rankings back how they should be.
Small bugfix 🐛 release
Added a quick and easy way to test the currently open tab with some of the most commonly used SEO tools:
* Open page in Search Console
* Search page with Google Site Search
* Open page in Page Speed Insights
* Open page in Google Cache
* Open page in Google's AMP Test
* Open domain in Similiar Web
* Open page in the Wayback Machine
* Open domain in the Wayback Machine
* Open page in the W3C Validator
* Open domain in "Built with"
* Open page in Ahrefs (Perfomance)
* Open page in Ahrefs (Backlinks)
* Open domain in BuzzSumo
* Open page in Majestic
* Open page in Moz
* Open page in Semrush (Performance)
* Open page in Semrush (Backlinks)
* Open domain in Whois
Dark mode 🌘!!
Sometimes, with a lot of schema on a page, you end up scrolling endlessly.
That is now a thing of the past.
The extension now groups similar types of schema markup together and shows you a count of how many of those particular schema types are found on the page.
Similar to what you're seeing on the Rich Results tester and that most technical SEO's are probably familiar with.
While the initial version was just two buttons to quickly validate any schema markup on the page you're visiting, this one immediately marks a big jump forward.
A little Christmas gift to the technical SEO community 🎄
This release added the option to view any schema markup on the page that you're visiting and allows you to immediately download all schema from the page you're viewing, or download the individual types found on the page with their keys and values.