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How is SEO impacted by a favicon?

How is SEO impacted by a favicon?


A favicon: what is it?


Icons that graphically depict a website and/or brand are called favicons. These are the tiny pictures (often 16 by 16 pixels) that appear in browser tabs, bookmarks, and history in addition to page names in Google's mobile search results. A website's favicon should ideally mimic the company logo.


The favicon of WooRank appears as follows in the search snippet for our website in Google's mobile search results:


Mobile SERP using the WooRank Favicon


In a tab of the Google Chrome browser, this is the icon:


Google Chrome tab with the WooRank favicon

This is the favicon for WooRank in the bookmarks of Google Chrome:


Bookmarks in Google Chrome using the WooRank favicon

And here is the favicon from the history of Google Chrome:


History of the WooRank favicon in Google Chrome

If a page's source code does not have a favicon, the browser will display a generic symbol that says:


Tab in Chrome browser for websites without a favicon

Some web app developers, like Google, will utilize a unique favicon for every app or online site. This browser has Google Search Console, Google Maps, and Google Drive open:


Chrome's favicon for Google Apps

This line of code is added to a page's <head> section to add a favicon:


This is a shortcut icon <link rel='Shortcut Icon' href='https://www.example.com/favicon.ico'~


The picture file is saved at the URL indicated in the link.


For the favicon, it is advised that you use the.ico file format (a file type created especially for storing icons), however PNG and (static) GIF files are also supported by all major browsers.


A Synopsis of Favicons' History

The idea for the name originated from Microsoft's Internet Explorer (now called Edge). The terms "favorite" and "icon" are combined to form the word "favicon". which is understandable given that it was shown in the browser's favorites bar next to the URL.


The first browser to support this file was Microsoft's Internet Explorer 5, which was launched in March 1999. In the rel element of the link code that was inserted into the site section, this was shown as a "shortcut icon." The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) recommended the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) in December 1999, standardizing favicons.


The effect of favicons on SEO

Search engine optimization and the page's placement in search results are unaffected by favicons. Nonetheless, when displaying a page in mobile search results, Google shows the favicon of the website:


Visible in mobile search results is the WooRank favicon.

The default icon will appear next to the URL in place of the provided icon for pages that have no favicon or that use one in violation of Google's favicon criteria.


Favicon by default in search results

But Googler John Mueller paused when asked whether the procedure was automated or manual:


In the realm of SEO, branding is now more crucial than ever because of this shift from Google.


Because Google automatically attempts to access the URL https://www.yoursite.com/favicon.ico when it crawls a page, some SEO experts will tell you that adding a favicon to your website will enhance SEO. In contrast to the pages on your website, Google will observe 404 errors if you don't have a favicon.


Nevertheless, Google has made no mention of the favicon's influence on results. Furthermore, Google is usually intelligent enough to recognize that a non-existent favicon URL that returns a 404 error is not indicative of a malicious website.


Beyond its SEO importance, the favicon

A UX consulting firm called Nielsen Norman Group released a research in 2015 that examined how people behave when they buy online for clothing.


Buyers, they discovered, will adhere to this fundamental procedure:


Open many tabs for things they are thinking about buying and weigh their alternatives.

Close browser tabs for sites they don't want to buy in order to remove things they don't want to buy.

Open a fresh set of tabs with the goods you want to investigate, and repeat the procedure.


In the end, Nielsen Norman reached the following conclusion:


   A common tendency, sometimes linked to page parking, is to alternate intervals of strong information search (opening new tabs) with periods of information digestion (consideration and consolidation, when some of those tabs are closed again).

The majority of your visitors are moving, opening, searching, and bookmarking stuff all the time in addition to other things.


As a result, your website's favicon serves as more than simply a little browser icon—it's a crucial tool that encourages people to remember your brand when making purchases.


The following advantages are yours to reap when you include a favicon on your website:


Brand awareness: Even when a person is not on your website, favicons help to maintain their attention on your company's identification.


Trustworthiness and Credibility: In the event that your website lacks a favicon, it will be readily apparent. On the other hand, a favicon will give your website a more polished, reputable, and established appearance.


Therefore, despite the impression that a website's favicon is a minor component, that is not the case. Subtle but significant improvements in your website's marketing may be achieved with a well-designed favicon.



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