Not related, but maybe of your interest: Unlike when posts are created in their own domain, if we use a Substack subdomain, 2 posts are actually created:
One that is hosted in our subdomain: mysubdomain.substack.c...
The other at substack.com/home/post/... followed by numbers, which is the one that has preference in search results.
What happens, in terms of SEO, is “cannibalization”: Google sometimes shows one, other times the other, so it always ranks poorly.
Furthermore, as I see in another note, it seems that Substack blocks the second newsletter we created in the same profile with a robots.txt.
Not related, but maybe of your interest: Unlike when posts are created in their own domain, if we use a Substack subdomain, 2 posts are actually created:
One that is hosted in our subdomain: mysubdomain.substack.c...
The other at substack.com/home/post/... followed by numbers, which is the one that has preference in search results.
What happens, in terms of SEO, is “cannibalization”: Google sometimes shows one, other times the other, so it always ranks poorly.
Furthermore, as I see in another note, it seems that Substack blocks the second newsletter we created in the same profile with a robots.txt.
Or maybe not:
Not related, but maybe of your interest: Unlike when posts are created in their own domain, if we use a Substack subdomain, 2 posts are actually created:
One that is hosted in our subdomain: mysubdomain.substack.c...
The other at substack.com/home/post/... followed by numbers, which is the one that has preference in search results.
What happens, in terms of SEO, is “cannibalization”: Google sometimes shows one, other times the other, so it always ranks poorly.
Furthermore, as I see in another note, it seems that Substack blocks the second newsletter we created in the same profile with a robots.txt.
Not related, but maybe of your interest: Unlike when posts are created in their own domain, if we use a Substack subdomain, 2 posts are actually created:
One that is hosted in our subdomain: mysubdomain.substack.c...
The other at substack.com/home/post/... followed by numbers, which is the one that has preference in search results.
What happens, in terms of SEO, is “cannibalization”: Google sometimes shows one, other times the other, so it always ranks poorly.
Furthermore, as I see in another note, it seems that Substack blocks the second newsletter we created in the same profile with a robots.txt.