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Google search results site map?
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I am new in SEO. I have put meta tag, title tag and also upload sitemap of website. I want to display all my webpages in google search as shown in image. Any idea how to do that ?? or it's depend on my website traffic ??
You can't control this, what you want is called "sitelinks" and google will display them when they think there is enough and good quality content. Work on your pages to make them better, add more valuable content and just wait until google do that for you.
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How to get such header title and search input in Google search for website like below:
I am doing my website with core PHP (not any CMS like WordPress, Drupal etc.). So please help me to get such a result in Google.
This is called Sitelinks.
Check it out here: https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/47334?hl=en
It's an Google automated process and you can't do much to control it. Although a google search on "how to get sitelinks" gives you plenty of results on how to get them, for example, here, or here.
Or perhaps you can purchase them under your AdWords advertisement.
As far as I know, it is much related to PHP. It's more on Search Engine Optimization (SEO).
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How to get Google Sitelinks on a website? [closed]
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Closed 2 years ago.
I noticed that some results of searching on Google are not a single url but a single url with a two-column list of what I call 'important links' of this website.
For example: If you open Google and search for "amazon.it", without the double quote, you got this:
As you can see, some links are evidenced directly on SERP ("eBook Kindle", for example).
I know I can produce a sitemap.xml for Google bot pleasure, but, my question is: How can I evidence some particular link of my website to be presented in this way in Google's SERP?.
As far I know, there is no a special syntax in the sitemap protocol to 'force' or 'suggest' this to search engines. For future readers: this is the link to the sitemap protocol.
These are called sitelinks and they are unrelated to sitemaps. Google only shows them when:
It understands the structure of your website (typically via the structures in URLs).
It trusts your website's content (no spam).
The content/link is relevant and useful for the corresponding user query.
Some say implementing breadcrumbs helps Google find SiteLinks candidates, but this has never been confirmed and may be completely false.
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I have a stack system that passes page tokens in the URL. As well my pages are dynamically created content so I have one php page to access the content with parameters.
index.php?grade=7&page=astronomy&pageno=2&token=foo1
I understand the search indexing goal to be The goal is to have only one link per unique set of data on your website.
Bing has a way to specify specific parameters to ignore.
Google it seems uses rel="canonical" but is it possible to use this to tell Google to ignore the token parameter? My URL (without tokens) can be anything like:
index.php?grade=5&page=astronomy&pageno=2
index.php?grade=6&page=math&pageno=1
index.php?grade=7&page=chemistry&page2=combustion&pageno=4
If there is not a solution for Google... Other possible solutions:
If I provide a site map for each base page, I can supply base URLs but any crawing of that page's links will crate tokens on resulting pages. Plus I would have to constantly recreate the site map to cover new pages (e.g. 25 posts per page, post 26 is on page 2).
One idea I've had is to identify bots on page load (I do this already) and disable all tokens for bots. Since (I'm presuming) bots don't use session data between pages anyway, the back buttons and editing features are useless. Is it feasible (or is it crazy) to write custom code for bots?
Thanks for your thoughts.
You can use the Google Webmaster Tools to tell Google to ignore certain URL parameters.
This is covered on the Google Webmaster Help page.
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I have a product page in my website which I have added 3 years before.
Now the product production was stopped and the product page was removed from website.
What I did is I started displaying message in the product page telling that the production of the product got stopped.
when some one searches in google for that products the product page which was removed from site shows up first in google search.
The page rank for the product page is also high.
I don't want the removed product page to be shown at the top of search result.
What is the proper method to remove a page from website so that it gets depicted by what ever google have indexed in its table.
Thanks for the reply
Delete It
The proper way to remove a page from a site is to delete the actual file that is been returned to the user/bot when the page is requested. If the file is not on the webserver, any well configured webserver will return a 404 and the bot/spider will choose to remove that from the index in the next refresh.
Redirect It
If you want to keep the good "google juice" or SERP ranking the page has, probably due to any inbound links from external sites, you'd be best to set your websever to do a 302 redirect to a similar (updated product).
Keep and convert
However, if the page is doing so well that it ranks #1 for searches to the entire site, you need to use this to your advantage. Leave the bulk of the copy on the page the same, but highlight to the viewer that the product no longer exists and provide some helpful options to the user instead: tell them about a newer, better product, tell them why it's no longer available, tell them where they can go to get support if they already have the discontinued product.
I am completely agree with above suggestion and want to add just one point.
If you want to remove that page from Google Search Result; just login to Google webmaster tool (you must have verified that website in Google webmaster tool) and add that particular page for index removal request.
Google will de-index that page and it will be removed from Google search rankings.
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I set up a site with a template and the title was something they supplied as a default. When I searched for my site's title, it showed up in results, but it was with their default title. After changing it a couple days ago, my site still shows up with the default title instead of what I changed it to.
Is there any way I can force Google to update their information so the title I have now shows up in results instead of the default title?
This will refresh your website immediately:
From Web Master tools Menu -> Crawl -> Fetch as Google
Leave URL blank to fetch the homepage then click Fetch
Submit to Index button will appear beside the fetched result; click it then choose > URL and all linked pages > OK
Just wait, Google should normally revisit your site and update its informations. But if you are hurried, you can try the following steps :
Increase the crawl speed of your site in Google Webmaster Tools : http://support.google.com/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=48620
Ping your website on service like http://pingomatic.com/
Submit if you have not yet or resubmit an updated sitemap of your website.
Fetching as Google works, as already suggested. However stage 2 should be - submit your sites to several large social bookmarking sites like digg, reddit, stumbleupon, etc etc. There are huge lists of these sites out there.
Google notices everything on these sites and it will speed up the re crawling process. You can keep track of when Google last cached your site (There is a big difference between crawling and caching) by going to.. cache:sitename.com