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I will tell you three things you can do to get your pages indexed lightning fast on Google. What do I mean by indexed being indexed? means that Google has visited your page and installed the content, ready to put it on the results page in front of its users. Still, it won't know when you add a page or update one, so it's up to you to tell when you add or update a page. Google and make sure it takes a look and uses the latest up-to-date version; there are three possible scenarios great, not perfect, and disaster great Google has the latest version of your page uses that to decide where to rank you it ranks you top and shows you front and center two boatloads of users and sends tons of people to your site not perfect. Google hasn't seen the latest version of your page; it's relying on the old, less good version to judge your page so that the page ranks lower.
Fewer people see your content on Google,
so fewer people visit your site from Google's disastrous. Google doesn't even
know your page. exists, so it can't include in the results at all. Google never
shows your amazing content to its users, and nobody visits your page. Google's
results are a disaster to illustrate. Here are some examples of how fast Google
finds new content on some major sites; this is a study by one. Lee, the guys,
called Bartosh. I won't try. Say a surname, and it's from 2019, so it's very
recent; we can see sites the. Guardian target writers and Event rite, I'll
start with the target. As you can see, Google found only 5% of the pages they
published on the first day; it found 75 percent by day. Seven that's a full
week where they're not. It seems ok, indexed where these pages are not
attracting traffic after a week, but 3 out of 10 pages are still not getting
over it even into week two; that's a phenomenal lost opportunity. Event rite
even worse, almost 50% were still not found by.
Google, after two weeks, that's half of
their content that hasn't been found by Google and cannot be shown by Google to
its users; that's a phenomenal waste here, writers they give up for 15 percent
of Reuters pages. Google seems to have stopped looking. after day two and will
probably never find them. All of those sites are losing traffic, sometimes slow
can be deadly for time-sensitive content; you can't wait a week after a piece
of week news is dead, and that page becomes a complete waste of your time, so
look at the Guardian you ought to be like them get most of your content
discovered that first day and all of it by the end of the first week, or you
could even do better and get every single page discovered on the day it was created
or updated, so you want to make sure that Google knows your page exists and
that it's up to date with the latest and greatest version as fast as possible
every time you update it, and it's up to you, and it's really easy and. I'm
going to show you three things. can do the last one is the most important and
the most effective and I'll demonstrate how it works.
Tip 1 add a link to the page you created
or updated on a page that already appears a lot in Google, which one though the
home Page is a great candidate. Google has a look at that first every time it
visits your site, but adding too many links to your home page isn't a great
idea either for Google or for your users, and you can't link to every single
page on your site from the home page, so have a look in the search console,
order the pages by impressions descending and add a link to a page that Google
already likes make sure it talks about something related to the page you want
to index because you need to make sure that pages that link to each other are
related and talked. For similar topics, tip number two add. an XML sitemap
sounds complicated, but it isn't. Google has a look at the sitemap before
looking at the site itself to see what it should be looking at; first, it acts
as a kind of signpost to Google to point it in the right direction; it contains
what's called the last modified date, so Google looks at that it sees when the
page was last modified. It will immediately go and see the ones that were
modified most recently or since it last visited them if you use a. CMS, you'll
want to install an extension Or a plugin in WordPress.
I use Yoast; it's really good for the sitemap, and it's also great for SEO in other CMSs, find an extension or a plugin that has the last modified date for the reasons I just explained if you don't use a CMS. you can always create your own by hand, but it needs to make an update every time you update your content. Once you've created an XML sitemap, You add it to the search console. Here's the little diagram to show you how to do that. Is a nice thing about the search console? Is it showing you the last time Google looked? If you haven't registered your site in the search Console at your sitemap, do it now. It's free, imperative, and essential to this last tip that's the most effective and the most powerful. Tell Google about the change and ask it to come and have a look; here's a real-time demo. Here I am on my site, and I will create a new page. There we go, and I'm prepared that title earlier on. Master blogger world indexing pages on. Google is relatively fast using the search console before creating it; I'll just quickly check that. It's not in Google already; there we go, no results were found for so on and so forth, so now I publish a new page never seen before.
Google doesn't know it exists. It Didn't
exist before now. It exists; it's a pretty dull page, but we can go to the
search console, and if I copy-paste the. URL in there Google goes and has a
look to see if it's already got it in the index, and it doesn't. We knew that
but here we have the confirmation, and I have—this button requests indexing. I
click on that, and I'm asking Google to go and have a look at the page to see
if it wants to index it now. The testing to see if the live URL can be in the
duck means that it needs to go to the URL, pick it up, get the page, then go
back and see if it can put it in its index or not and as it says on the screen,
this might take a minute or two; it takes a
little bit less than a minute but in this context of trying to do this
in In real-time, that minute does seem just a little long. Still, if you're a
little bit patient, you'll see that Google will finish this testing. It will
figure out that it can index the URL, and then it will submit it to the index,
so if we remain a tiny bit patient; there we go; we're submitting the request
and Weaving that we've requested; sorry for the indexing of the page, I've
understood that, so now I can go back, and I can see this page. It is now in
Google's index, and for the.
At the moment, it isn't, but if we wait, I
will see if we take off there slowly, slowly, slowly my connection obviously
isn't as good as it should be, and it's found my podcast but not that page
there we've got it, and we can see it here if I visit the page where that URL
is exactly the same as that one and that was in real-time, so that's how you
can get a new page indexed incredibly fast or an updated page re-indexed
incredibly fast and make sure that Google got your latest pages and the latest
version of your pages for its index, there you go so now you know why it's so
important to get your new and updated pages indexed by Google quickly and how
to do it doesn't wait for Google to find your page by chance it may take weeks
or never happen in either case, you're wasting time and you're losing traffic,
so make sure all pages have a link from a relevant page on your site that's
already shown in Google results add a sitemap to your the site and submit pages
to the search console when you update them and a little secret if you have a
small place, you can ignore the first two and just submit through search
console but logical internal linking is good for ranking, and then XML sitemap
means that you have a safety net even if you forget to submit manually Google
will find the new or updated page. And it will just be a little bit slower, but
you can forget you don't need to. Submit it systematically. Please do remember
to like to share and comment on the video. Thank you very much; see you next
time.

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