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Posts Tagged ‘Google Webmaster Tools’

Google Webmaster Sitemap Submission Made Simple


Submitting a Sitemap to Google just became even easier. No longer do you have to specify the Sitemap file type—we’ll determine the type of data you’re submitting automatically. Let’s take a quick look at the kinds of Sitemap files we support as well as the ways they can be submitted to us.

Sitemap file formats supported [...]

Google One place for changing your site’s settings


One of the many useful features of Webmaster Tools is the ability to adjust settings for your site, such as crawl rate or geographic target. We’ve been steadily adding settings over time and have now gotten to the point where they merit their own page. That’s right, Webmaster Tools now provides a single, dedicated page [...]

More control of Googlebot’s crawl rate


We’ve upgraded the crawl rate setting in Webmaster Tools so that webmasters experiencing problems with Googlebot can now provide us more specific information. Crawl rate for your site determines the time used by Googlebot to crawl your site on each visit. Our goal is to thoroughly crawl your site (so your pages can be indexed and returned [...]

On-Demand Sitemaps for Custom Search


Since we launched enhanced indexing with the Custom Search platform earlier this year, webmasters who submit Sitemaps to Webmaster Tools get special treatment: Custom Search recognizes the submitted Sitemaps and indexes URLs from these Sitemaps into a separate index for higher quality Custom Search results. We analyze your Custom Search Engines (CSEs), pick up the [...]

Google’s SEO Starter Guide


Webmasters often ask us at conferences or in the Webmaster Help Group, “What are some simple ways that I can improve my website’s performance in Google?” There are lots of possible answers to this question, and a wealth of search engine optimization information on the web, so much that it can be intimidating for newer [...]

Where’s my data?


Today we’re going back to basics. We’ll be answering the question: What is a website?
…Okay, not exactly. But we will be looking into what a “website” means in the context of Webmaster Tools, what kind of sites you can add to your Webmaster Tools account, and what data you can get from different types of sites.
Why should [...]

Message Center warnings for hackable sites


Recently we’ve seen more websites get hacked because of various security holes. In order to help webmasters with this issue, we plan to run a test that will alert some webmasters if their content management system (CMS) or publishing platform looks like it might have a security hole or be hackable. This is a test, [...]

Video Tutorial: Google for Webmasters


We’re always looking for new ways to help educate our fellow webmasters. While you may already be familiar with Webmaster Tools, Webmaster Help Discussion Groups, this blog, and our Help Center, we’ve added another tutorial to help you understand how Google works. Hence we’ve made this video of a soon-to-come presentation titled “Google for Webmasters.” This video will [...]

Helping you break the language barrier


by Maile Ohye

When webmasters put content out on the web it’s there for the world to see. Unfortunately, most content on the web is only published in a single language, understandable by only a fraction of the world’s population. 
In a continued effort to make the world’s information universally accessible, Google Translate has a number of tools for you [...]

Webmaster Tools API updated with Site Settings


The Webmaster Tools GData API has been updated to allow you to get even more out of Webmaster Tools, such as setting a geographic location or your preferred domain. For those of you that aren’t familiar with GData, it’s a protocol for reading and writing data on the web. GData makes it very easy to communicate with many Google services, like [...]

Good times with inbound links


Inbound links are links from pages on external sites linking back to your site. Inbound links can bring new users to your site, and when the links are merit-based and freely-volunteered as an editorial choice, they’re also one of the positive signals to Google about your site’s importance. Other signals include things like our analysis [...]

Linking out: Often it’s just applying common sense


Creating outbound links on your site, or “linking out”, is our topic for Day 3 of Links Week. Linking out happens naturally, and for most webmasters, it’s not something you have to worry about. Nonetheless, in case you’re interested about an otherwise simple topic that’s fundamental to the web, here’s the good, the bad, and [...]

Links information straight from the source


We hope that you’re able to focus on helping users (and improving the web) by creating great content or providing a great service on your site. In between creating content and working on your site, you may have read some of the (often conflicting) link discussions circling the web. If you’re asking, “What’s going on [...]

Importance of link architecture


In Day 2 of links week, we’d like to discuss the importance of link architecture and answer more advanced questions on the topic. Link architecture—the method of internal linking on your site—is a crucial step in site design if you want your site indexed by search engines. It plays a critical role in Googlebot’s ability [...]

Advanced Website Diagnostics with Google Webmaster Tools


Running a website can be complicated—so we’ve provided Google Webmaster Tools to help webmasters to recognize potential issues before they become real problems. Some of the issues that you can spot there are relatively small (such as having duplicate titles and descriptions), other issues can be bigger (such as your website not being reachable). While [...]

Keeping comment spam off your site and away from users


So, you’ve set up a forum on your site for the first time, or enabled comments on your blog. You carefully craft a post or two, click the submit button, and wait with bated breath for comments to come in.
And they do come in. Perhaps you get a friendly note from a fellow blogger, a pressing update [...]

More webmaster questions - Answered!


When it comes to answering your webmaster related questions, we just can’t get enough. I wanted to follow-up and answer some additional questions that webmasters asked in our latest installment of Popular Picks. In case you missed it, you can find our answers to image search ranking, sitelinks, reconsideration requests, redirects, and our communication with [...]

Dynamic URLs vs. static URLs


hatting with webmasters often reveals widespread beliefs that might have been accurate in the past, but are not necessarily up-to-date any more. This was the case when we recently talked to a couple of friends about the structure of a URL. One friend was concerned about using dynamic URLs, since (as she told us) “search [...]

Demystifying the “duplicate content penalty”


Duplicate content. There’s just something about it. We keep writing about it, and people keepasking about it. In particular, I still hear a lot of webmasters worrying about whether they may have a “duplicate content penalty.”
Let’s put this to bed once and for all, folks: There’s no such thing as a “duplicate content penalty.” At least, not in the way most people [...]

Your burning questions - Answered!


In a recent blog post highlighting our Webmaster Help Group, I asked for your webmaster-related questions. In our second installment of Popular Picks, we hoped to discover which issues webmasters wanted to learn more about, and then respond with some better documentation on those topics. It looks like it was a success, so please get [...]

The Impact of User Feedback, Part 2 (and more Popular Picks!)


As a follow-up to my recent post about how user reports of webspam and paid links help improve Google’s search results for millions of users, I wanted to highlight one of the most essential parts of Google Webmaster Central: our Webmaster Help Group. With over 37,000 members in our English group and support in 15 [...]

Hey Google, I no longer have badware


This post is for anyone who has been emailed or notified by Google about badware, received abadware warning when browsing their own site using Firefox, or has come across malware-labeled search results for their own site(s).  As you know, these warnings are produced by our automated scanning systems, which we’ve put in place to ensure [...]

Make your 404 pages more useful


Now that we’ve bid farewell to soft 404s, in this post for 404 week we’ll answer your burning 404 questions.
How do you treat the response code 410 “Gone”?
Just like a 404.
Do you index content or follow links from a page with a 404 response code?
We aim to understand as much as possible about your site [...]

Farewell to soft 404s


We see two kinds of 404 (”File not found”) responses on the web: “hard 404s” and “soft 404s.” We discourage the use of so-called “soft 404s” because they can be a confusing experience for users and search engines. Instead of returning a 404 response code for a non-existent URL, websites that serve “soft 404s” return [...]

It’s 404 week at Webmaster Central


This week we’re publishing several blog posts dedicated to helping you with one response code: 404.
Response codes are a numeric status (like 200 for “OK”, 301 for “Moved Permanently”) that a webserver returns in response to a request for a URL. The 404 response code should be returned for a file “Not Found”.
When a user [...]

To infinity and beyond? No!


hen Googlebot crawls the web, it often finds what we call an “infinite space”. These are very large numbers of links that usually provide little or no new content for Googlebot to index. If this happens on your site, crawling those URLs may use unnecessary bandwidth, and could result in Googlebot failing to completely index [...]

Matt Cutts on ranking, spam and the future of search


During a recent visit to the Mountain View Googleplex, I had the chance to interview Matt Cutts for our German Webmaster Blog. While enjoying the California sunshine we chatted about how to rank in Google, resources for webmasters and Matt’s first encounter with spam. As these topics are not only interesting for a German audience, [...]

Google Trifecta recording now available


st Tuesday, Google hosted an online presentation about three free tools to help analyze and improve your sites. Dubbed “The Google Trifecta,” this presentation explains the key features of Google Webmaster Tools, Google Analytics, and Google Website Optimizer, and how you can use them together.
To make the information from this presentation accessible to those who [...]

Helping yourself to Webmaster Tools


Written by: Peeyush Ranjan and Liza Ma, Webmaster Tools team
Since not every webmaster can come to us, we are coming to you. Last November, we announced a pilot program whereby all Go Daddy users got free and easy access to all Webmaster Tools has to offer, right from their account management panels in Go Daddy. [...]

What are your SEO recommendations?


You may have noticed that we recently rewrote our article on What is an SEO? Does Google recommend them? Previously, the article had focused on warning people about common SEOscams to look out for, but didn’t mention many of the valuable services that a helpful SEO can provide.
The article now notes some of the benefits [...]

Improved Flash indexing


We’ve received numerous requests to improve our indexing of Adobe Flash files. Today, Ron Adler and Janis Stipins—software engineers on our indexing team—will provide us with more in-depth information about our recent announcement that we’ve greatly improved our ability to index Flash.
Q: Which Flash files can Google better index now?
We’ve improved our ability to index [...]