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In a recent article on nngroup.com , Amy Schade recommends carefully questioning the use of images on mobile websites: “Is the image meaningful for users? If not, remove it. If yes, carefully edit the image used on the larger screen so that you preserve meaning, prevent excessive scrolling, and avoid overly slow pages on a smaller screen. In the end, being critical of images and their use on small screens may result in high-quality and high-impact images on large screens as well.” In good German: If the image is meaningless to the user, remove it from the mobile site.
If you also want to use it on mobile devices, edit it so that it maintains its message India Car Owner Phone Number List even on the small screen (and does not simply display an inappropriate image section) the user does not have to scroll endlessly to read the relevant content the page is not slowed down unnecessarily You should also make sure that the images on your mobile website also have appropriate ALT tags, as TheSemPost recently pointed out . This is important not only from an SEO perspective, but also for reasons of user-friendliness - for example if images cannot (or cannot) be loaded.

Googlebot, the locked-out onlooker Last but not least: Make sure that Googlebot is not locked out, but can see your site like an average user and crawl your JavaScript, CSS and image files. This is the only way to ensure that Google indexes your mobile site appropriately. Deepen your knowledge of mobile optimization The topic of mobile optimization and mobile usability is of course far too comprehensive to do any justice to it in a single article. Nevertheless, I hope I have given you a good overview of mobile UX and some important orientation points. If you want to delve deeper into this and questions about optimizing mobile websites, then I recommend the following links.
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