Post by account_disabled on Nov 28, 2023 23:28:57 GMT -5
Results omitted from pages already positioned on Google In search of better results for their websites, many administrators end up overdoing their search engine ranking efforts. In this case, Google may skip some results based on having multiple pages talking about the same topic. Suppose a gardening blog creates two different texts for the keyword Winter Garden: Winter Garden: Note that, even if the two texts are of quality, Google is probably not going to position them in the 1st and 2nd positions. Instead , it will ignore one or more domains related to the keyword and show different results from other domains in the other links. When that happens, the mechanism may display a clickable link with the words “show more results for .
The competition between search terms on the same website Phone Number List has a name: keyword cannibalism. In that case, AD (Domain Authority) and AP (Page Authority) are disregarded. That can become a big problem when a website has dozens of URLs competing for the same keywords. There is yet another reason (whose reason is human) for this: the visitor simply does not like results that lead him to the same domain. According to the former head of the company's Spam team, Matt Cutts, looking at a bunch of options and choosing the one that best fits to get a response (in other words, deliberation) is part of the Internet user's culture. Results omitted from pages that have not yet positioned themselves in Google In some cases, novice entrepreneurs create their websites from scratch and they simply do not appear in search results.
The first thing you should know in this case is that Google does not index the pages immediately . Therefore, in recently created domains, it may be necessary to wait a while. The webmaster or developer can also help the crawler by manually indexing the pages using Google Search Console . For this it is necessary to have a sitemap file. Another possibility is that the site is marked to "not appear in search engines." That is very easy to solve in the main CMS's like WordPress, Blogspot and Wix. Generally it's just a marker that needs to be disabled. Despite the simplicity, it's worth checking this out before assuming it's okay. Now, in case your page is already indexed and yet does not appear in the search mechanisms, this may mean that it presents content very similar to another already located on Google, or even within your own blog .
The competition between search terms on the same website Phone Number List has a name: keyword cannibalism. In that case, AD (Domain Authority) and AP (Page Authority) are disregarded. That can become a big problem when a website has dozens of URLs competing for the same keywords. There is yet another reason (whose reason is human) for this: the visitor simply does not like results that lead him to the same domain. According to the former head of the company's Spam team, Matt Cutts, looking at a bunch of options and choosing the one that best fits to get a response (in other words, deliberation) is part of the Internet user's culture. Results omitted from pages that have not yet positioned themselves in Google In some cases, novice entrepreneurs create their websites from scratch and they simply do not appear in search results.
The first thing you should know in this case is that Google does not index the pages immediately . Therefore, in recently created domains, it may be necessary to wait a while. The webmaster or developer can also help the crawler by manually indexing the pages using Google Search Console . For this it is necessary to have a sitemap file. Another possibility is that the site is marked to "not appear in search engines." That is very easy to solve in the main CMS's like WordPress, Blogspot and Wix. Generally it's just a marker that needs to be disabled. Despite the simplicity, it's worth checking this out before assuming it's okay. Now, in case your page is already indexed and yet does not appear in the search mechanisms, this may mean that it presents content very similar to another already located on Google, or even within your own blog .