
At one time or another you may have used a submission tool, or submitted by hand
and then wondered why you had not been indexed. Unfortunately, there are many
reasons that may delay or prevent you from being indexed by a search engine.
There's rarely one simple answer for why you're not being found. Fortunately,
there is generally an explanation and a way to correct the problem if you know
what to look for.
Below are the Top 21 reasons we've compiled over the years as to why you may not
be finding your Web site or Web page in one or more search engines:
1. INDEX TIME: First, make sure you've allowed enough time to become indexed.
The amount of time to allow is sometimes listed on the search engine's
submission page. Unfortunately, the engine's own advertised times are often
inaccurate or out of date. WebPosition's Submitter report and WebPosition's URL
Verification report will both tell you how much time you should allow before
being concerned about not being indexed. Average index times often range from
one to eight weeks depending on the engine. Some engines like AltaVista and
Inktomi offer paid options if you wish to be indexed more quickly.
2. ALREADY INDEXED: Be sure you're not already indexed but just don't know it.
Unfortunately, none of the major engines are kind enough to e-mail or notify you
as to if and when you've been indexed.
In addition, you cannot simply do a search on a keyword that applies to your Web
site and expect it to pop up at the top. In fact, you must take pro-active steps
to optimize your pages for each search engine. If you don't, it's very unlikely
you'll find your Web site except on the most specific of searches.
The method to determine if a page or domain has been indexed varies from one
engine to another, and in many cases, it's difficult to tell for sure whether
your pages are in fact in there. Never assume that you're not indexed just
because you searched for a bunch of keywords and you never came up in the first
few pages of results. You could be there (i.e., indexed) but be buried near the
bottom.
In addition, it's not very practical to check the status of a number of pages on
each major engine each week. Fortunately, WebPosition Gold has a URL
verification feature in the Reporter that makes this process much easier. Each
time you run a mission, it will report which URLs exist and do not exist in each
engine. If you're using WebPosition and are not finding your URLs after
submitting, be sure to see this page for common pitfalls to watch out for:
http://www.webposition.com/urlnotfoundhelp.htm
3. MISSING PAGE: Make sure you have uploaded the pages to your site before
submitting them. This one will seem obvious to many people, but submitting a
page that does not exist or submitting with a subtle typo in the URL is a goof
we might all make at one time or another. If you're using WebPosition's
Submitter, there's a checkbox on tab 2 labeled "Verify that each page
exists on Web site before submitting." This option defaults so that
WebPosition will verify that all your URLs are valid and actually exist before
submitting them. This is important since not all search engines will notify you
if the URL does not exist when you submit.
4. ROADMAP FROM HOME PAGE: Some engines have been known to drop pages that
cannot be traveled to from the home page. HotBot has been rumored to do this.
You may want to consider submitting your home page that links either directly or
indirectly to your doorway pages. Think of your Web site as a series of roads
(i.e., links) from one page to another. If there's no road from your home page
to the page you want indexed, a search engine may decide the page is unimportant
or of low-quality. You could submit the page directly, but the engine may reject
it or may drop it at a later date when it finds no "road."
5. EXTERNAL LINKS: Some search engines such as Google and HotBot have been known
to refuse to index Web sites that do not have any other Web sites linking to
them. Or, they may index your home page but refuse to index any other pages
until you achieve at least one or more links from another domain. Or, they may
index you for awhile but then "prune" their database later of all Web
sites that did not achieve any external links within a certain period of time.
However, do not worry! You simply need to establish some links and when that's
done, resubmit both your pages and the pages that link to you. Once you have
links to your Web site, it becomes much easier to get indexed, stay indexed, and
to achieve top rankings.
To check your link popularity and for tips on how to increase the links to your
Web site see our free service at: Link Popularity Tool
6. FRAMES: If you have
content inside HTML frames, this can cause problems with submissions. For
example, the search engine may index the main content of the page, but not the
surrounding menu frame. Visitors to your site will then find some information
but may not see the associated menu! It's generally best if you can create
non-framed versions of your pages. You should then submit the non-frames
versions of your pages, which can of course link to your framed Web site.
Alternatively, you can enter your relevant text within the NOFRAMES area of a
framed page that most search engine spiders will read. However, don't expect to
achieve high rankings while optimizing the NOFRAMES area. Optimizing a
NON-framed page will often achieve better results.
7. SPIDER BLOCKS: Search engine spiders cannot index sites that require any kind
of registration or password. A spider cannot fill out a form of any kind. The
same rule applies regarding indexing of content from a searchable database.
That's because the spider cannot fill out a form to query that database. The
solution is to create static pages that the engines will be able to find and
index without performing a special action on your site. Depending on the
database system you have, there are utility programs out there that help you do
this, as well as companies that can assist you.
8. FREE SITES: Many engines no longer index pages from free web sites or they
limit the number of pages they will index from these hosts. Sometimes they will
get too many "junk" submissions from free web site domains such as
Geocities or others. Therefore, some engines choose not to index anyone from
some of these domains. Or, more commonly, they limit the number of pages they
will accept.
It's always best to buy your own domain name (very important) and place it on a
respected, paid service to avoid being discriminated against. The free traffic
you can generate from the search engines is just too valuable to be sacrificed
for the small savings a free hosting service provides. In addition, free hosts
are often unreliable or force you to display banners that send valuable visitors
away from your Web site soon after arriving. That can cost you sales.
9. GUILT THROUGH ASSOCIATION: If your Web site shares the same IP address as
many other Web sites on your host's Web server, then you may find your IP
quietly banned from something another Web site on the same server did! It's
always best to ask your hosting service if your domain name has its own unique
IP assigned to it. If not, ask them to move it to its own IP to avoid the
potential of having your submissions ignored because of something that a site
sharing your IP did. We've heard from many people who tried everything to be
indexed only to find it was a snap once they changed hosting services.
10. SUBMISSION LIMITS: Make sure you're submitting within the recommended
limits. Some engines do not like more than a certain number of submissions per
day for the same domain. If you exceed the limit, you may find that all your
submissions are ignored. Fortunately, WebPosition's submitter will warn you
regarding current limits and help keep you within them. Some submission
consultants feel it is dangerous to submit more than ONE page a day to an engine
for a given Web site. For those who wish to be ultra-conservative in their
approach, the WebPosition Submitter includes a checkbox to limit submissions to
one URL per day per engine.
11. DYNAMIC PAGES: Dynamic pages are often ignored by the search engine spiders.
In fact, any URL containing special symbols like a question mark (?) or an
ampersand (&) will be ignored by many engines. Pages generated on the fly
from a database often contain these symbols. In this situation, it's important
to generate "static" versions of each page you wish to be indexed. In
regard to the search engines, the simpler the page is, the better. Does this
mean, for example, having a javascript to count visits to the page will prevent
you from being indexed, or lower your rankings? No. It simply means that the
search engine will most likely ignore the javascript and index the remaining
areas of the page. There is evidence that going too far with fancy scripts and
code on a page can hurt your rankings if the bulk of your page consists of java
or VB scripts.
12. NON-INDEXABLE CONTENT: It's important to know the types of content that the
average search engine cannot index. Most engines cannot index text that is
embedded in images. Text that appears in multimedia files (audio and video) will
not be indexed. Most engines cannot index information that is generated by Java
applets or in XML coding.
13. LARGE PAGES: If your site has a slow connection or the pages are very
complex and take a long time to load, it might time out before the spider can
index all the text. For the benefit of your visitors and the search engines,
limit your page size to 50K or less. In fact, most Webmasters recommend that
your page size PLUS the size of all your images on the page should not exceed
50K-70K total. If it does, many people on dial up connections will leave before
the page fully loads.
14. DEEP LINKS: If you
submit just your home page, don't expect a search engine to travel more than one
or two links away from the home page or from the page that you submitted. Over
time they may venture deeper into your site, but don't count on it happening
quickly. You'll often need to submit pages individually that appear further down
into your site or create more direct links from the home page (either visible
links or hidden links). This way the search engines can find them. Visible links
are preferable, but when that's not practical, there are methods to create links
that won't be seen by the average visitor:
http://www.webposition.com/hiddenlinks.htm
The technique of submitting one page that then links to multiple other pages you
want found is called creating a "hallway page." In many cases, this
will not only get you indexed in cases where they are ignoring you, but it will
often improve your rankings. That's because many engines assign "bonus
points" to pages they find on their own versus pages that were specifically
submitted to them.
15. UNRELIABLE HOSTS: If your Web site fails to respond when the search engine
spider pays a visit, you will not be indexed. Even worse, if you are indexed and
they pay a visit when your site is down, you could be removed from their
database! Consequently, it pays to have a reliable hosting service that is up
99.5% of the time. However, at some point a spider is going to hit that other
0.5% and end up yanking your pages by mistake. Therefore, it pays to keep a
close eye on your listings and resubmit when needed.
16. SPAM: If you have ever used any questionable techniques that might be
considered an overt attempt at spamming (i.e., excessive repetition of keywords,
same color text as background, or other things that the WebPosition Page Critic
warns you about), an engine may ignore or reject your submissions. If you're
having trouble getting indexed in the expected amount of time, make sure your
site is spam-free.
17. REDIRECTS: If your site contains redirects or meta refresh tags these things
can sometimes cause the engines to have trouble indexing your site. Generally
they will index the page that it is redirecting TO, but if it thinks you are
trying to "trick" the engine by using "cloaking" or IP
redirection technology that it can detect, there is a chance that it may not
index the site at all.
18. PROPER DIRECTORY SUBMISSIONS: If you're submitting to a directory site like
Yahoo, Open Directory, Looksmart, or others, then a human being will review your
site. They must decide if the site is of sufficient "quality" before
they will list it. I recommend you read the submission guide on the directory
tab of the WebPosition Submitter. It contains tips on how to improve your
chances of obtaining a good listing in these directories. Getting listed in
major directories first can help you get listed elsewhere.
19. INDEX TIMES CAN FLUCTUATE: WebPosition will tell you the average index time
of each search engine. However, this is only an average. Sometimes engines will
index sites every 30 days fairly consistently and then suddenly stop indexing
most sites for several months. This can be frustrating, but it does happen.
Generally a major engine will not go more than three to four months without
refreshing its index. If you're wondering if others are experiencing trouble
getting indexed on a particular engine, try asking around. You can often find
valuable real-world feedback on a search engine discussion forum such as the one
at:
http://www.marketposition.com
20. PAGE LIMITS: If you have many pages indexed but are having a hard time
getting new ones recognized, be aware that there are limits. Each search engine
will only spider so many pages of your Web site. This may range from a few dozen
or three or four hundred depending on the engine. Some people have even been
successful in getting far more pages indexed depending on the engine. Google is
one engine that tends to crawl deeper into your site. However, how deep they go
may depend on factors like your link popularity. Sites with higher link
popularity are deemed "worthier" of more thorough indexing.
21. RANDOM ERRORS: Last but not least, sometimes the engines just lose
submissions at random through technical errors and bugs. After all, they are
managing a database of hundreds of millions of pages. Therefore, some people
like to resubmit once or twice a month for good merit in case they do lose a
submission. Certainly if you've followed all the "rules" and are still
not listed, by all means, re-submit! Sometimes a little persistence is all
that's needed.
TIP: Once your page achieves a desirable ranking, it's best not to continue
submitting it. You risk the engine re-evaluating the page and possibly reducing
your ranking.
If any of the above scenarios apply to your submission, you should take the
appropriate actions and then re-submit. If that still does not work, you should
consider e-mailing or calling the search engine and asking them politely why you
have not been indexed yet. Sometimes they will reply back with "Sorry,
there was a problem with our system and I've now made sure you'll be indexed
within the next couple days." Or, sometimes they'll tell you why you were
not indexed so you might correct it. In other cases, they will ignore your
e-mail and you'll have to keep e-mailing or calling them until they respond.
Still, it's definitely worth the effort to get your site listed with the major
engines. This assumes you also take the time to optimize your pages so you'll
achieve top rankings.
Robin Nobles is the Director of Training of the Academy of Web Specialists,
which teaches online training in search engine marketing. She is also a trainer
with Search Engine Workshops, which presents on location workshops in search
engine marketing at various locations across the country. Please visit our site
for more information about online
training and other resources.
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