SEO
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SEO Basics12 Topics|1 Quiz
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What is SEO
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Google Algorithm For SEO
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SEO Terms and Ranking Factors
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Types of Search Engine SEO Factors
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Content & Search Engine Success Factors
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Site Architecture & Search Engine Success Factors
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HTML Code & Search Engine Success Factors
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Trust, Authority & Search Rankings
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Link building & Ranking in Search Engines
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User Context Signals & Search Engine Rankings
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Toxins & Search Engine Spam Penalties
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Emerging Verticals in Search
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What is SEO
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Semantic Core12 Topics|1 Quiz
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What Is Semantic Core
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Selecting Semantic Keywords
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Commercial Keywords
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Keyword Frequency and Density
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Mid-Range Keywords
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Low-Frequency Keywords
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Low Competition Keywords
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Competitors Research
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Collect The Competitor`s Semantics
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Analyzing Semantic Core
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Keywords With Small Traffic
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Relevant Similar Keywords
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What Is Semantic Core
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Keywords Clustering14 Topics|1 Quiz
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What Are Keywords Clustering
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Lemma-Based Clustering and Serp-Based Clustering
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Keyword Research
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Competitors Keywords Analysis
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Find Keywords Ideas
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Cheсking Keywords Data
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Search Volume
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Search Intent
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Types Of Keyword Intent
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Research Intent
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LSI And Synonyms
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Cost-Per-Click
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The Relevance
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Segment Keywords Into Groups
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What Are Keywords Clustering
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Website Structure11 Topics|1 Quiz
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On-Page SEO55 Topics|1 Quiz
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What Is On-Page SEO
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Meta-Tags
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Content
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Text
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Structural Text Elements
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Graphics
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Videos
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Design
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URL Structure
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Internal Linking
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Internal Links And Structure
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Types Of Internal Links
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Navigational Links
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Contextual Links
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Puproses of Using Internal Links
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Internal Links Strategies
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Cornerstone Content and Internal Linking Features
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Internal Links Audit
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Software For Internal Linking
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Canonicalization
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What Is a Snippet
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Types of Snippets
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Rich And Regular Snippets
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Featured Snippets
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Translating Content to Structured Data
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What Is an SEO Title
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What Is A Meta Description
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How To Write Meta Description
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Tools For Checking Meta Descriptions
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How To Improve Your Title Tag
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How To Improve Your Meta Description
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Breadcrumbs Navigation
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What Is Anchor Text
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How Does Anchor Text Affect SEO
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Types Of Anchor Texts
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Anchor Text HTML
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How To Optimize Anchor Text For SEO
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How To Improve Your Anchor Link Texts
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What Is The Anchor Tag
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The Difference Between Hyperlink And Anchor Text
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Anchor Text Manipulation
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Anchor Text And Backlinks
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Image’s Alt Attribute
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How To Optimize Images
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The Image's Size
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Title Attribute
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The Caption
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The File Name
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How To Add Alt Text To Image
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Adding Alt Text Based On The Purpose Of The Image
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Tips For Writing Alt Tags
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Tools For Adding Alt Tags
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Yoast: Local, Video, News SEO
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Yoast SEO Content Functions
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WooCommerce SEO
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What Is On-Page SEO
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Technical SEO9 Topics|1 Quiz
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SEO Reporting38 Topics|1 Quiz
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SEO Audit
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What Is The Google Search Console
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What Is Google Search Console Used For
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The Main Sections Of The Google Search Console Interface
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What Are Impressions, Position, And Clicks
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CTR
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How To Use Google Search Console To Improve Your SEO
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Resource And Setting Management
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Site Settings Management
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Adding a Resource
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Deleting a Resource
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Linking And Unlinking Resources With Other Services
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Moving Site To Another URL
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Tracking Indicators
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Indexing Status
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AMP Status
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Rich Results Status
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Sitemap Status
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Basic Internet Metrics (LCP, FID, CLS)
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Page Speed
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Troubleshooting
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Why Is The Page Or Site Missing From Google
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Why Isn't My Rich Result Showing On Google Services
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Problems With Decreasing Traffic Volume
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Problems With The Deterioration Of Site Rankings
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Problems With Page Descriptions In Search Results
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Testing
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URL Inspection Tool
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Amp Test
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Signed Exchange Issues
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Mobile-Friendly Test Tool
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Rich Results Test
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Robots.Txt File Checker
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Scanning And Indexing
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Submitting A Request To Google To First Crawl Or Re-Crawl Your Page
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Temporarily Exclude Pages And Images From Google Search Results
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Submitting A Scan Request Or Rescanning
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Submitting Sitemaps And Tracking Their Status
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SEO Audit
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External SEO8 Topics|1 Quiz
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SEO Strategy2 Topics|1 Quiz
Participants 286
- Anna
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Indexing Status
11.02.2022
As you know, Google Search Console is an essential part of every SEO’s toolbox.
Among other things, Google Search Console reports on your organic performance and how they fared when crawling and indexing your site. The latter topic is covered in their ‘Index Coverage report’, which this article is all about.
What is the Google Search Console Index Coverage report?
When Google is crawling and indexing your site, they keep track of the results and report them in Google Search Console’s Index Coverage report.
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It’s basically feedback on the more technical details of your site’s crawling and indexing process. In case they detect pressing issue, they send notifications. These notifications are usually delayed though, so dont solely rely on these notifcations to learn about high-impact SEO issues.
Google’s feedback is categorized in four statuses:
- Valid
- Valid with warnings
- Excluded
- Error
When should you use the Index Coverage report?
Google says that if your site has fewer than 500 pages, you probably don’t need to use the Index Coverage report. If organic traffic from Google is essential to your business, you do need to use their Index Coverage report, because it provides detailed information and is much more reliable than using their site: operator to debug indexing issues.
The Index Coverage report explained
The screenshot above is from a fairly large site with lots of interesting technical challenges.
Find your own Index Coverage report by following these steps:
- Log on to Google Search Console.
- Choose a property.
- Click Coverage under Index in the left navigation.
The Index Coverage report distinguishes among four status categories:
- Valid: pages that have been indexed.
- Valid with warnings: pages that have been indexed, but which contain some issues you may want to look at.
- Excluded: pages that weren’t indexed because search engines picked up clear signals they shouldn’t index them.
- Error: pages that couldn’t be indexed for some reason.
Each status consists of one or more types. Below, we’ll explain what each type means, whether action is required, and if so, what to do.
Valid URLs
As mentioned above, ”valid URLs” are pages that have been indexed. The following two types fall within the “Valid” status:
- Submitted and indexed
- Indexed, not submitted in sitemap
Submitted and indexed
These URLs were submitted through an XML sitemap and subsequently indexed.
Action required: none.
Indexed, not submitted in sitemap
These URLs were not submitted through an XML sitemap, but Google found and indexed them anyway.
Action required: verify if these URLs need to be indexed, and if so add them to your XML sitemap. If not, make sure you implement the robots noindex directive and optionally exclude them in your robots.txt if they can cause crawl budget issues.
Pro tip
If you have an XML sitemap, but you simply haven’t submitted it to Google Search Console, all URLs will be reported with the type: “Indexed, not submitted in sitemap” – which is a bit confusing.
It makes sense to split the XML sitemap into smaller ones for large sites (say 10,000+ pages), as this helps you quickly gain insight in any indexability issues per section or content type.
Valid URLs with warnings
The “Valid with warnings” status only contains two types:
- “Indexed, though blocked by robots.txt”
- “Indexed without content”
Indexed, though blocked by robots.txt
Google has indexed these URLs, but they were blocked by your robots.txt file. Normally, Google wouldn’t have indexed these URLs, but apparently they found links to these URLs and thus went ahead and indexed them anyway. It’s likely that the snippets that are shown are suboptimal.
Please note that this overview also contains URLs that were submitted through XML sitemaps since January 2021.
Action required: review these URLs, update your robots.txt, and possibly apply robots noindex directives.
Indexed without content
Google has indexed these URLs, but Google couldn’t find any content on them. Possible reasons for this could be:
- Cloaking
- Google couldn’t render the page, because they were blocked and received a HTTP status code 403 for example.
- The content is in a format Google doesn’t index
- An empty page was published.
Action required: review these URLs to double-check whether they really don’t contain content. Use both your browser, and Google Search Console’s URL Inspection Tool to determine what Google sees when requesting these URLs. If everything looks fine, just request reindexing.
Excluded URLs
The “Excluded” status contains the following types:
- Alternate page with proper canonical tag
- Blocked by page removal tool
- Blocked by robots.txt
- Blocked due to access forbidden (403)
- Blocked due to other 4xx issue
- Blocked due to unauthorized request (401)
- Crawl anomaly
- Crawled – currently not indexed
- Discovered – currently not indexed
- Duplicate without user-selected canonical
- Duplicate, Google chose different canonical than user
- Duplicate, submitted URL not selected as canonical
- Excluded by ‘noindex’ tag
- Not found (404)
- Page removed because of legal complaint
- Page with redirect
- Soft 404
Crawled – currently not indexed
These URLs were crawled by Google, but haven’t been indexed (yet). Possible reasons why a URL may have this type:
- The URL was recently crawled, and is still due to be indexed.
- Google knows about the URL, but hasn’t found it important enough to index it. For instance because it has few to no internal links, duplicate content or thin content.
Action required: make sure there aren’t important URLs among the ones in this overview. If you do find important URLs, check when they were crawled. If it’s very recent, and you know this URL has enough internal links to be indexed, it’s likely that will happen soon.