![]() When you ask for a specific site, Google may show a page from that domain with the content, title, and description from another domain. Take for example moz.com which used to be. ![]() They may show pages that are known to Google, but that doesn’t mean they’re eligible to show in normal search results without the site: operator.įor example, site: searches can still show pages that redirect or are canonicalized to another page. While site: searches can be useful for identifying the pages or sections of a website that may be problematic if they show in search results, you have to be careful because they aren’t normal queries and won’t actually tell you if a page is indexed. What I typically see SEOs do to check if content is indexed is use a site: search in Google (e.g., site:).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |