How to index my site in Google? because it crawl my site but not index.

Started by latestnews, 02-13-2017, 08:43:36

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latestnewsTopic starter

HI Everyone !! Let me help actually my website index page crawl by google but it does not index so how to index my site in Google. because when we check crawl status then it shows but does not show meta title of website.


amitkedia

To help Google index your website, you can follow these steps:

1. Submit your website to Google: Use the Google Search Console to submit your website URL. This will notify Google to start crawling and indexing your site.

2. Create an XML sitemap: A sitemap is a file that lists all the pages on your website. Generate an XML sitemap and submit it to Google Search Console.

3. Optimize your website for crawlability: Ensure that your website is easily accessible to search engine crawlers. Check for any "noindex" tags or robots.txt file directives that may be preventing Google from indexing your pages.

4. Improve your site's loading speed: Google prefers websites that load quickly. Optimize your site's performance by compressing images, enabling caching, and using a Content Delivery Network (CDN).

5. Create high-quality content: Publish original, relevant, and valuable content that provides value to your users. Google values sites that consistently produce high-quality content.

6. Build backlinks: Encourage other reputable websites to link back to your site. Backlinks help Google discover and index your website more effectively.

7. Use proper meta tags: Ensure that each page on your website has a unique and descriptive meta title and description. This helps Google understand the content of your pages and display relevant information in search results.

8. Promote your website: Share your website on social media platforms, participate in online communities, and consider running online advertisements to increase your visibility and attract more organic traffic.

9. Optimize your URLs: Use descriptive and keyword-rich URLs for your webpages. This makes it easier for search engines to understand the content of your pages.

10. Check for duplicate content: Google prefers unique content, so make sure you don't have any duplicate content issues on your website. Use tools like Copyscape to identify any duplicate content and resolve it.

11. Fix broken links: Check your website for broken links and fix them promptly. Broken links can negatively impact your website's crawlability and indexing.

12. Optimize images: Compress images to reduce file sizes without compromising quality. Use descriptive alt tags that include relevant keywords to help search engines understand the content of your images.

13. Mobile-friendly design: Ensure that your website is mobile-friendly and responsive. Google gives priority to mobile-friendly websites in its search results.

14. Monitor crawl errors: Regularly check for crawl errors in Google Search Console and fix them. Fixing crawl errors helps Google index your website more effectively.

15. Keep your website updated: Regularly update your website with fresh content. This signals to search engines that your website is active and encourages more frequent crawling.

16. Monitor your organic traffic: Keep an eye on your website's organic traffic through Google Analytics. If you notice a sudden drop in traffic, it could indicate indexing or other SEO-related issues that need attention.


8 Reasons Why Your Site Might Not Get Indexed
* Robots.txt
* .htaccess
* Meta Tags
* Sitemaps
* URL Parameters
* You don't have enough Pagerank
* Connectivity or DNS issues
* Inherited issues


HafizTronic

Identifying Crawling Problems

Fixing Crawling Errors

Typically these kinds of issues are caused by one or more of the following reasons:

Robots.txt - This text file which sits in the root of your website's folder communicates a certain number of guidelines to search engine crawlers. For instance, if your robots.txt file has this line in it; User-agent: * Disallow: / it's basically telling every crawler on the web to take a hike and not index ANY of your site's content.
.htaccess - This is an invisible file which also resides in your WWW or public_html folder. You can toggle visibility in most modern text editors and FTP clients. A badly configured htaccess can do nasty stuff like infinite loops, which will never let your site load.
Meta Tags - Make sure that the page(s) that's not getting indexed doesn't have these meta tags in the source code: <META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="NOINDEX, NOFOLLOW">
Sitemaps- Your sitemap isn't updating for some reason, and you keep feeding the old/broken one in Webmaster Tools. Always check, after you have addressed the issues that were pointed out to you in the webmaster tools dashboard, that you've run a fresh sitemap and re-submit that.
URL Parameters - Within the Webmaster Tools there's a section where you can set URL parameters which tells Google what dynamic links you do not want to get indexed. However, this comes with a warning from Google: "Incorrectly configuring parameters can result in pages from your site being dropped from our index, so we don't recommend you use this tool unless necessary."
You don't have enough Pagerank - lolwut? Matt Cutts revealed in an interview with Eric Enge that the number of pages Google crawls is roughly proportional to your pagerank.
Connectivity or DNS issues - It might happen that for whatever reason Google's spiders cannot reach your server when they try and crawl. Perhaps your host is doing maintenance on their network, or you've just moved your site to a new home, in which case the DNS delegation can stuff up the crawlers access.
Inherited issues - You might have registered a domain which had a life before you. I've had a client who got a new domain (or so they thought) and did everything by the book. Wrote good content, nailed the on-page stuff, had a few nice incoming links, but Google refused to index them, even though it accepted their sitemap. After some investigating, it turned out that the domain was used several years before that, and part of a big linkspam farm. We had to file a reconsideration request with Google.
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