Schema Markup

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asked Oct 13, 2022 in Internet by outrightcrm (380 points)
What are the types of Schema Markup and how to check that schema markeup is added on site or not?

2 Answers

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answered Nov 4, 2022 by 2021sucked (43,240 points)
Schema markup which is also called structured data, is the language of search engines that use a unique semantic vocabulary.

The schema markup is code that is used to more clearly provide information to search engines in order to understand your content.

Schema markup is code that helps search engines to understand your content and better represent it in the search results.

You've probably already encountered marked-up content in the form of rich snippets: But schema markup can do more than that and help your SEO in other ways.

The schema markup should only be added to the pages where the content that you used to create the schema is represented.

Adding schema to every page of the site can confuse search engines as to what the schema is actually representing.

Where Schema is the language in which you present your content, structured data is the actual data you provide.

It describes the content on your page and what actions site visitors can perform with this content.

This is the input you give search engines to get a better understanding of your pages.

To boost your SEO using schema markup.

Go to Google's Structured Data Markup Helper.
Select the Type of Data. There are several options listed.
Paste the URL You Want to Markup.
Select the Elements to Mark Up.
Continue Adding Markup Items.
Create the HTML.
Add Schema Markup to Your Site.
Test Your Schema.

The Schema App Structured Data Tester can be found in the “Maintenance” tab in Schema App. Enter any URL, and this tool will display the schema markup found on that page.
0 votes
answered Oct 30, 2023 by maxlead (140 points)

Schema Markup is a A nifty tool for SEO. It is often written in JSON-LD, Microdata, or RDFa, helps search engines grasp the content on a webpage. Common types include:

  1. Organization Schema: Provides info about a company.
  2. Person Schema: Details about an individual.
  3. Event Schema: Info on events.
  4. Product Schema: Data on products for sale.
  5. Recipe Schema: For cooking recipes.
  6. Review Schema: Customer reviews.
  7. Article Schema: For news and blog posts.
  8. FAQ Schema: Frequently asked questions.
  9. Local Business Schema: Local business details.

For checking if Schema Markup exists on a site, you've got options. First, you can manually inspect the source code. Just right-click on the webpage and select "View Page Source." Then, use Ctrl+F to search for "schema," "JSON-LD," or other related terms. Alternatively, Google's Structured Data Testing Tool can help. Just plug in the URL and let it do its magic. Another option? Browser extensions designed for this very purpose. Quite a few out there.

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