Canon Copier Dealer Websites Since 2008

Specializing in Search Engine Optimization

Canon Copier Dealer Websites

Canon Office Equipment Dealer Websites

Tap The Web has been providing Copier Dealer Websites since 2008. Whether you need an entire website, or just want to use our complete up-to-date Product Catalogs, we have an affordable, no hassle solution for your company.  All of our copier dealer websites automatically scale to fit smart phones and tablets. Our websites are built using the latest WordPress Elementor Professional designs. We also have a WordPress Plug-in to easily integrate our product catalogs into any WordPress website.  We provide web-sites for over 100 dealers, and have Product Catalogs for all major brands.

New Searchable Catalogs

Tap The Web’s  Product Catalogs were built in WordPress for WordPress. This means that clients can search the catalogs by brand or by product type and class. Multi-Line dealers’ clients can view  all of their Color MFPs with one click.  Older, out-dated catalogs require three or four clicks to view a product and only one brand can be displayed at a time.

Each Product has its Own Page

This means each product page is indexed by Google. Many catalogs use codes for manufacturers and models Example (/catalog.php?ttweb_mfgID=9&ttweb_classID=28).  With our new WordPress Catalogs, a Brother MFC L6900DWX is called just that.  Google recognizes the product and the page on your website. 

All New Designs for 2024

Click the Image Below to see Live Website

Google says mobile-first indexing is complete after almost 7 years.

Google said it will turn off the indexing crawler information in the settings page in Search Console.

Google’s mobile-first indexing initiative that started just about seven years ago is now complete, according to Google. “It’s been a long road, getting from there to here. We’re delighted to announce that the trek to Mobile First Indexing is now complete,” John Mueller from Google wrote on the Google blog.

History. As a reminder, Google started mobile-first indexing over 6.5 years ago, and eventually, after publishing deadline after deadline, Google removed the deadline. Google first introduced mobile-first indexing back in November 2016, and by December 2018, half of all sites in Google’s search results were from mobile-first indexing. Mobile-first indexing simply means that Google will crawl your site from the eyes of a mobile browser and use that mobile version for indexing and ranking.

Google early March 2020, before all the lockdowns began across most of the world, announced the deadline for all sites to switch over to mobile-first indexing would be September 2020. At that time, Google said, “To simplify, we’ll be switching to mobile-first indexing for all websites starting September 2020.”  Then in July 2020, Google moved that deadline once again to March 2021. But in May, Google told us that it was done switching sites over to mobile-indexing, so this announcement, that it is “done” now is a bit confusing. What now. Google said there is “a very small set of sites which do not work on mobile devices at all.” Google explained that those “are primarily that the page shows errors to all mobile users, that the mobile version of the site is blocked with robots.txt while the desktop version is allowed for crawling, or that all pages on the mobile site redirect to the homepage.” Google said these types of issues are issues that Google cannot workaround. Google said it will “continue to try to crawl these sites with our legacy desktop Googlebot crawler for the time being, and will re-evaluate the list a few times a year.” Google will also reduce its crawling with legacy desktop Googlebot.