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Showing posts with the label Search Console Performance

About Twitter Profile Labels

Twitter uses visual identity signals like labels and badges on account profiles to help distinguish between various account types and to give more context about them. While some of these labels are generated by Twitter, others are the result of user activity. Here is a list of the labels and badges that are frequently seen on account profiles. Applied Profile labels by Twitter Checkmark in Blue The blue checkmark can indicate one of two things: either that a user's account has been verified according to Twitter's previous verification standards (active, notable, and authentic), or that the user has an active subscription to Twitter Blue, the company's new subscription service that launched on iOS on November 9, 2022. The active, notable, and authentic criteria that were applied in the previous process will not be reviewed for accounts that receive the blue checkmark as part of a Twitter Blue subscription. Here is more information about the blue checkmark. Gold Checkmark The

An in-depth look into Search Console performance data filtering and restrictions

The most commonly used data in Search Console is Google Search performance statistics, which is accessible via the Performance report and the Search Analytics API. This post goes over the data that is available and how Google processes it, including privacy filtering and other constraints relating to serving latency, storage, and processing resources. Have you ever wondered how these systems work? Let's take a closer look at them. Check out the introduction to Performance reports if you're new to Search Console. The fundamentals of search performance The Performance report includes four measures that indicate the evolution of your search traffic over time. Here's a synopsis of the article that describes how each metric is calculated: Clicks: The number of times a person clicks on your property from Google Search results. Impressions: The number of times your property appeared in Google search results. CTR (Click-through rate): The number of clicks divided by the number of i