Thursday, October 22, 2009

Web Page searches. I have published my web page on the internet and registered my URL with Yahoo and

Yet It does not come up when I search using these two search engines. How long does it take for their crawlers to pick it up or do I have to do something else to have it indexed?



Web Page searches. I have published my web page on the internet and registered my URL with Yahoo and Google?





its suppose to be about a week i think but mine came up after about 2 or 3 days



Web Page searches. I have published my web page on the internet and registered my URL with Yahoo and Google?



It can vary greatly,



Though usually shouldn%26#039;t be much longer than a few weeks.



Though search engines have the right to not list your pages at all, due to content/pure crapiness as well as others.



Though is you have a few sites linking your web, than you should be listed reasonably quickly



Other Replys:It takes several weeks. Be patient!



Other Replys:Although Yahoo and Google still have a submission service where you can notify them of your sites existance, submitting your site to them this way generally will not help you get indexed quickly this way these days.



You are much more likely to get your site found quicker if you can get at least one link to it from an existing established site that is already indexed and preferably from a page that has a page rank greater than 3 or 4.



The reason for this is higher page rank sites generally get crawled more frequently than lower ones, so the link to your site from a high page rank page will get found quicker.



You should look in your web site stats for signs that the crawlers of Google (googlebot) and Yahoo (Slurp) have visited your site.



Yahoo is generally slower than Google at finding new sites and could take 2 to 3 weeks, compared to Google. Both search engines will probably only index your main home page to start with and come back later for a more detailed look.



They will then generally index your site pages and you will find them when you do a search on the search engine.



However this does not mean they will stay indexed. The SE will evaluate your pages in time and could decide not to keep them in their index if they find the content is sufficiently duplicated elsewhere or has no value to them.



Google also has what is known as the %26quot;Sandbox%26quot; where it often places new web sites. It%26#039;s like a holding pen where it waits and watches how the site develops and also will prevent it from being ranked for any competitive search terms. Sites can stay in the sandbox anywhere from 3 months to 12 months before being released for ranking.



Welcome to the brave new world of having a web site on the Internet.



regards



Tony

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