Latest posts made by NEdocs
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RE: How to check if an individual page is indexed by Google?
Fascinating - from what you describe it looks like Google might be getting ready to index the page, but it has not gone live yet. If the URL can't be found from a Google search...it most definitely is not indexed...because if it was, it would be in the results...you dig?
However, since you have info: pulling results - it shows that Google is familiar with the pages in question (at least to provide cached pages). Give it some time and hold out. Try running a few searches on large portions of text, check the site: search every few days, and if all else fails....get that WMT info. Nothing more useful than submitting a new sitemap and fetching the pages you want reviewed.
Good luck! Best,
Christopher
posted in Technical SEO
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RE: Click Through Rate on Password Protected Pages
Hey Daniel,
Google will get its insight from your Analytics. Again, the spiders crawling your site are for indexing. However, the Analytics code is going to be capturing all of that valuable user data...and you have just as much access to it as Google does.
Consider this: The crawler will have absolutely no idea who is on your page or what they are doing...that is not their purpose. Therefore, even pages that are being indexed are not providing that data to Google.
I hope that clears up any confusion!
posted in Intermediate & Advanced SEO
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RE: Click Through Rate on Password Protected Pages
As long as your Analytics code is on your password protected pages, it should be able to track your visitors (not sure if this is possible in your database, but perhaps it could be embedded in your header). Google's crawling is meant to index your pages in search results, but has nothing to do with your user tracking.
If you have access to the code used on your protected pages, insert your code and let me know if it picks up your visitors! Easy to test, just have someone log in and see if there are any current active users onsite. If so - your data should be golden.
posted in Intermediate & Advanced SEO
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RE: Local SEO - Adding the location to the URL
Hey Sander,
Anders hit the nail on the head - but I felt I needed to add a bit of information. Be careful how you decide to add location to your URLs, as it could potentially hurt your rankings. There is much more involved in local search relevance than just a city or state name being included in a URL.
Also, it could seem "spammy" if your website becomes overrun with local tags. I would suggest setting up a structured URL, for exampls "www.company.com/Nevada/Las-Vegas/Products"
This way your URLs are serving 2 purposes - thoughtful organization and helping out with your keyword strategy.
Best,
Christopher
posted in Local Website Optimization
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RE: Page Title (Meta descriptions) length... how strict are you?
To be honest, it does not make a huge difference. The reason for staying within the 55-60 character limit is so that your title does not get truncated in the SERPs. While it is not necessarily detrimental, it could impact click-through rates. Keep in mind - this limit is still not perfect. Depending on the pixel width of the letters used, you could still end up losing some of your title. Keep your keywords near the front, keep it natural, and you will be fine.
Tool for checking SERP titles: https://moz.com/blog/new-title-tag-guidelines-preview-tool
As for company name, it really only helps if the company has strong brand recognition. If no one is performing searches based on or including their name...inserting it into every page will not help the cause. Generally speaking, a search for a company name will yield results including their website regardless of company name placement in their title/description tags. Stick it on the homepage, contact page, about us, etc. - otherwise focus on describing the intent of the page and let Google do its thing.
posted in On-Page Optimization
Best posts made by NEdocs
-
RE: Local SEO - Adding the location to the URL
Hey Sander,
Anders hit the nail on the head - but I felt I needed to add a bit of information. Be careful how you decide to add location to your URLs, as it could potentially hurt your rankings. There is much more involved in local search relevance than just a city or state name being included in a URL.
Also, it could seem "spammy" if your website becomes overrun with local tags. I would suggest setting up a structured URL, for exampls "www.company.com/Nevada/Las-Vegas/Products"
This way your URLs are serving 2 purposes - thoughtful organization and helping out with your keyword strategy.
Best,
Christopher
posted in Local Website Optimization
-
RE: Click Through Rate on Password Protected Pages
As long as your Analytics code is on your password protected pages, it should be able to track your visitors (not sure if this is possible in your database, but perhaps it could be embedded in your header). Google's crawling is meant to index your pages in search results, but has nothing to do with your user tracking.
If you have access to the code used on your protected pages, insert your code and let me know if it picks up your visitors! Easy to test, just have someone log in and see if there are any current active users onsite. If so - your data should be golden.
posted in Intermediate & Advanced SEO
-
RE: How to check if an individual page is indexed by Google?
Fascinating - from what you describe it looks like Google might be getting ready to index the page, but it has not gone live yet. If the URL can't be found from a Google search...it most definitely is not indexed...because if it was, it would be in the results...you dig?
However, since you have info: pulling results - it shows that Google is familiar with the pages in question (at least to provide cached pages). Give it some time and hold out. Try running a few searches on large portions of text, check the site: search every few days, and if all else fails....get that WMT info. Nothing more useful than submitting a new sitemap and fetching the pages you want reviewed.
Good luck! Best,
Christopher
posted in Technical SEO
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