This page provides information about the different prioritization methods that Acquia Web Governance uses for issues and errors.
The script sends a request to our server when a page on the website loads with a JavaScript-enabled agent. The following data is used:
With this data, we can calculate the number of pages that have the error and then compare it to the number of errors on each page. For example, one dead link on the busiest page of a website has a higher priority than 5 dead links on the least-visited page.
Priority can be seen as below in the Opportunities by Priority in the Performance module and in the Accessibility feature. The issues are sorted automatically and also rate the level of difficulty to fix them. The difficulty ratings are the following:
Priority is also seen in the Quality Assurance module on the page view and in the Inventory module and reports. The categories here indicate priority from high to low as determined by the number of times the error occurs and the number of page views on the page that is affected. The priority levels are the following:
This section provides information on how priority ranking is determined in the Web Governance SEO, Accessibility, and Inventory modules.
Priority Rankings:
Missing H1
The H1 header tag is typically the first header tag visible on a page. H1 tags are formatted differently from other page tags. When search engines crawl pages, H1 tags help them to accurately identify the page content. Also, visitors are able to navigate web pages that feature H1 tags more easily. Pages with no H1 tags are difficult for search engines to crawl accurately and are a negative experience for visitors, which harms your SEO.
Title found on more than one page
Title tags allow users and search engines to quickly understand the content that they can expect to find on a page. More than one title tag on a page may confuse search engines and users as to the contents of a page, and harms your SEO.
Missing title
Title tags allow users and search engines to quickly identify the content that they can expect to find on a page. Pages with no title tag can harm your SEO rankings and negatively impact the user click-through rate from search results. The recommendation is to always include a title tag that clearly communicates what the page is about.
Images missing ALT
As search engines cannot ‘‘see’’ images on web pages the way we can, an image with a missing ALT tag can cause the site to be ranked lower due to unintended keywords, and may result in it not being ranked at all. ALT tags on images should describe the image as accurately as possible.
Missing ALT tags for images can also have a negative impact on the level of ADA compliance on the website. Visitors who use assistive technologies such as screen readers rely on ALT tags to navigate and understand the website content.
For more information, visit:
Too short content on page
A page may be perceived as ‘’thin’’ by search engines if it does not contain a certain amount of content. While there is no clear rule as to the amount of content a page should have, it is advisable to have a minimum of 300 words.
Multiple H1 on page
H1 tags allow users and search engines to quickly understand the content that they can expect to find on a page. A page with more than one title tag may confuse search engines and users as to the contents of a page, and can affect the SEO. Use only one H1 per page to increase SEO.
Missing subheadings
Subheadings allow users and search engines to quickly identify what content they can expect to find on a page. A site with no subheadings can receive a lower search engine ranking and a low click-through rate from search results. Always include subheadings to identify specific sections of content and increase SEO.
(Identical) H1 found on more than one page
H1 tags allow users and search engines to quickly identify the content that they can expect to find on a page. A site that has more than one page with the same H1 tag may confuse search engines, and can negatively impact your rankings and your click-through rate from search results. Make all of the H1 tags across the domain unique and relevant to the on-page content to increase SEO.
Too short META description
Meta descriptions are important as they help users and search engines identify the content that they can expect to find on a page. A short meta description may not contain enough characters to accurately communicate the content of a page, and this can harm your SEO.
Too many internal links
Search engines use links to determine how relevant a page is to specific search criteria. It is therefore important to ensure that all of your internal links are useful for your visitors. Web Governance recommends minimal use of internal links and advises users to ensure that all of your internal links are appropriate to the site content.
Too long URL
URL length is listed as #46 in Google’s top 200 ranking factors. Although there is no exact rule as to how long URLs should be, shorter URLs tend to rank higher on web searches. Shorter URLs benefit users as they are clearer when copied in full.
Too long META description
In order to display fully in search engine results, it is recommended that you keep meta description length between 150-160 characters. Meta descriptions that are longer than this may contain unnecessary text, and will negatively impact your SEO score. Web Governance recommends meta descriptions of less than 160 characters for best results.
The issues listed in this category require manual review, the scan cannot determine if they are legitimate issues or not.
Pages with - No index
Pages that have been given a no-index tag are listed here for review. The Web Governance scan cannot determine if pages pages have been given a no-index tag intentionally, these results must be manually reviewed to see if any remedial action is required.
Links with - No-follow
Pages with a no-follow tag are listed here for review. The Web Governance scan cannot determine if pages have been given a no-follow tag intentionally, these results must be manually reviewed to determine if any remedial action is required.
For more information, visit:
The severity rating assigned to an error in the Data Privacy module indicates the level of risk associated with the flagged data. This rating takes into consideration the potential negative effect on organizational assets, organizational operations, and individuals if it were disclosed without authorization.
How the severity of security issues is calculated:
For more information, visit How use the Data Privacy add-on.
The results of the accessibility checks are prioritized and the issues are placed in the following categories:
Error
The issue is in direct conflict with the standard and needs to be fixed. These are usually content issues such as HTML snippets that are not compliant. These issues can only be fixed with a change to the source code.
Warning
The issue is most likely in conflict with the standard, do a manual review and fix the issue.
Review
The issue cannot be programmatically determined as an error or warning and requires human review. Do a manual review of the issue to determine if any fix can be done.
For more information, visit:
Likelihood is a rating given within the Data Privacy module to results. This rating indicates the level of certainty that the error is in fact accurate.
Likelihood ratings are divided into the three following categories:
False positives can occasionally occur, and so we recommend that users manually review the flagged data for absolute accuracy.
For more information, visit Data Privacy.
This section provides information about how the different modules and features calculate the score for issues and errors.
The compliance score for the accessibility checks is calculated by using 100 (a perfect score) minus the number of errors found. This is then divided by the total number of accessibility checks.
The compliance score for data privacy check is calculated as follows:
The scan is done on each domain for several data privacy checks. To calculate the compliance score for the domain, we calculate the average. For example: the total sum divided by the total amount of data privacy checks that the scan looks for on the domain.
Ignored issues or checks are not counted towards the compliance scores.
The compliance score for the quality assurance check is calculated by dividing the total number of page errors found by the total number of page errors plus the total number of documents, multiplied by 100.
Sometimes also referred to as SEO issues or SEO checkpoints.
The compliance score for SEO issues is calculated as follows:
The number of pages with issues divided by the number of total pages.
The following Technical SEO issues are not taken into account in the domain compliance score:
This section provides information about the complexity levels for the resolution of performance issues. This breakdown of issues is found in the Performance module > page details > Opportunities page.
This view provides some indication about the level of expertise that is needed to correct the issue. Keep in mind that some CMS systems are easier to work with than others. For more information on the difficulty level of an error, contact the support team.
If this content did not answer your questions, try searching or contacting our support team for further assistance.
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