Fortunately, Magento has the ability to create a sitemap.xml file and does a good job of this in the default settings. You can configure the XML sitemap settings in Magento's Catalog menu. However, these should mostly be fine.
When configuring these settings, you may need to generate a sitemap.xml file so that it is actually published on the website. Fortunately, this process is very simple. You can do this in the following ways:
Click the Add Sitemap button
For "File name", add the text "sitemap.xml"
For Path, select the URL path you want to associate with the germany mobile database sitemap.xml file. This is usually in the "pub" URL path
Click "Save and Generate"
SitemapGenerate
This should correctly set up your sitemap.xml on Magento. You will then need to make sure you submit your sitemap.xml file to the Google Search Console so that Google can discover your sitemap.xml file.
2. JavaScript rendering
Something else you want to be careful about on your Magento site is anything that is loaded via JavaScript. Magento often uses JavaScript to load critical content on your store. While this isn’t inherently negative for SEO, it’s something you should definitely be reviewing.
If JavaScript is required to load critical content on the page, this means that Google has to do a two-step indexing process , processing the initial HTML and then having to go back to the site to render any content loaded via JavaScript. Where SEOs need to check is in the second phase of the indexing process to make sure Google is able to "see" all the content on the page. If any elements are loaded via JavaScript, it's worth checking if they are indexed.