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But, like most things in life, what's worth having is hard to get

Posted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 8:27 am
by zihadhasan019
Rate of crawling is slow - if you're updating content, links and launching new pages multiple times per day, and Google's coming by every week, you're likely in trouble. XML Sitemaps might help, but it's likely you're going to need to improve some of those factors described above to get in good graces for the long term. There's no doubt that indexation can be a vexing problem, and one that's tremendously challenging to conquer. When the answer to the "how do we get those pages back?" is "make the content better, more unique, stickier and get a good number of diverse domains to link regularly to each of those millions of URLs," there's going to be resistance and a search for easier answers.


As always, I'm looking forward to your tho israel email list ughts (and your shared experiences) on this tough issue. I'm also hopeful that, at some point in the future, we'll be able to run some correlations on sites that aren't fully indexed to show how metrics like link counts or domain importance may relate to indexation numbers. I work for a healthcare non-profit organization (NPO) in Kansas City, KS as the project manager.


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As a NPO we have little funds if any for advertising, much less online advertising. So when I learned about SEO and what it could mean for us I dove in head first. First thing I did was add the meta tags (the guy before me left everything black) and began to add us to different directories online as well as searching for other sites that had us linked so I could update our information. With just over a year of doing this I’m looking into the next phase of our SEO, link building.