Which is not to say that our blogs are no longer visible on desktop, of course, or that it doesn't matter if they are navigable on a computer, but that core web vitals are only evaluated for mobile, since 90% of searches occur on mobile and that 99% of blogs that navigate well on mobile certainly don't cause problems on desktop.
That our blogs, if they have some structural features chinese overseas america data that are considered acceptable from desktop but not accessible from mobile, will be penalized. Here's what to do to recover positions by making the blog truly navigable and good even from mobile. Blog tree structure Do you have second and third level menus on your blog? For example, you have a travel blog and you have a menu item called ITALY and then a drop-down menu with all the regions you've written about? This could be a problem.
Second and third level menus have long been discouraged because, in fact, on mobile they involve a lot of clicking, a lot of loading and a lot of visual instability to be displayed in their entirety. Eliminating second and third level menus is the first step to regain positions.
lose positions in serp Sudden pop-ups If in the desktop version, a sudden pop-up with the invitation to subscribe to the newsletter stops in a corner of the blog, perhaps at the bottom right, that same pop-up, on mobile, takes up a good part of the screen. Despite the fact that pop-ups are extremely annoying even on desktop and that those who browse our blog have already slowed down their browsing experience due to cookie preferences and privacy information, imposed by law, on mobile pop-ups have been the main cause of a high bounce rate for years.