View, validate, and export schema markup from any page with this browser extension. Perfect for SEO professionals to create templates and enhance organic search performance with one-click ease.
Hey Hunters 👋
As an SEO expert working on schema markup implementations on my clients websites, I was constantly:
CMD-T > type: schema validator > wait for SERP > click > pageload > type: URL > enter
CMD-T > type: rich results tester > wait for SERP > click > pageload > type: URL > enter
There you I, wasting another two minutes when I've could've single-clicked in just a browser extension.
It was a constant time drain.
I built this browser extension to fix this.
I launched the first version in an SEO community I'm a part of.
This gave me initial feedback on including an easy way to see all schema markup on a page directly from the extension, and being able to export all, or just the individual types.
And here we are, ready to help more SEO professionals around the word, making their schema work a lot easier.
This extension is saving me and my team members a lot of time. I'm convinced it will do the same for you.
@hansvangent Your browser extension for viewing, validating, and exporting schema markup sounds like a game-changer for SEO professionals! Streamlining the process into a single-click action directly in the browser is a huge time-saver. It's great that you've developed it based on real-world SEO experience and community feedback.
The ability to see all schema markup on a page and export it easily will undoubtedly enhance SEO efficiency. I'm curious, does the extension also offer suggestions or highlight potential issues within the schema markup? Excited to see how it aids SEO professionals in their work!
@sichen_shao great feedback! Currently it doesn’t show any potential issues (yet) straight from the plugin as both the rich results tester and the schema validator itself are doing that. But it might be interesting to do some form of validation already straight in the plugin to save even more time. Will need to look into that!
And was already thinking maybe with the help of AI to parse an entire page and name suggestions on missing schema markup for that page, but haven’t gotten round to that researching that more as I’m currently first building a version for Safari.
Hey Hans! Your browser extension sounds like a game-changer for SEO professionals. I'm curious, what sparked your idea to create it in the first place? Keep up the great work!
@goyashy mostly time-saving; like I mentioned in my opening comment, I was creating a lot of schema templates for my clients. Every time I started working on one and had to test it, I opened a new tab, going to the schema.org validator first and then the rich results tester after, only to copy-paste the URL in there.
So v1 was literally just two buttons opening up the current page into those testers.
Then I had some initial feedback that it might be a good idea to already see the individual schema types on the page you were viewing and potentially export them so you could learn from others and use those to create your own templates.
And that's where we are now.
I am waiting for Apple to approve my developer license so I can also release it for Safari and then look at more features maybe to help save time even more.
What would something schema related be, that you think could be a great help?
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