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How to Use Google’s New Free-to-Use Tool to Boost Your SEO

In the world of SEO, when Google announces a major update, your SEO can only sink or swim.

In similar fashion to their recent update to New AdWords, Google is in the process of redesigning their data collection platform, Search Console. Throughout Q1 2018, Google is sending out new Google Search Console (currently in beta) reports directly to all webmasters to refresh them on website crawling errors that may be negatively affected in Google Search results.

Google Search Console Email

If you’ve already received your New Search Console report, and you’re not sure how to correct the errors on your report, get in touch with us. We’re happy to offer a free consultation on your technical SEO audit.

In the digital marketing world, history proves that when Google invests heavy resources into innovating one of their products, they’re aiming to make search marketing more efficient, more measurable and, ultimately, more valuable.

For marketers, updates to Google Search Console means there is a new “standard” for websites to achieve for SEO success. Based on the early beta testing phase currently available to all webmasters, there are new tools in the SEO roadmap to leverage your website rankings over our competition. But, you need to know the “rules of the road” in order to get the best results without limiting resources.

First Things First: What is Google Search Console?

Google Search Console (GSC), formerly called Google Webmaster Tools, is a free service offered by Google that helps monitor and maintain your site’s presence in search results. Use GSC to:

GSC also provides greater depth into data on your site’s organic search presence than what displays on Google Analytics. If you’re familiar with Google Analytics, you may know that if you try to investigate top search queries you’ll find this data is (not provided) or (not set). These are placeholder names that Analytics uses when it hasn’t received any information on the selected data.

Why does Google Search Console provide more organic search data than Google Analytics?

Search Console collects data across all Google searches while Google Analytics measures traffic exclusively to your website. Google Analytics is not set up to report on users that did not visit your website (missed opportunities), while GSC offers predictive results that measure how many times your website displayed in search results without being clicked on.

Through GSC, you can discover how Google Search sees your site:

What’s New: New Features for Actionable Insights

Through 2018, Search Console is bringing users a completely redesigned product to help manage your site’s presence on Google Search. The new Search Console (currently still in beta testing) is rebuilt from the ground up to provide the tools and insights that webmasters and SEOs have been asking for.

The new platform can now confirm which of your pages are indexed and get information on how to fix indexing errors. Through GSC, we can also monitor site performance on Google Search with 16 months of data (to enable year-over-year comparisons).

Check your site’s current status using the new Search Console.

Google’s update to GSC is not done yet, so over the course of 2018, the new Search Console will continue to add functionality from the classic Search Console. Until the new Search Console is complete, both versions will live side-by-side and will be easily interconnected via links in the navigation bar, so we can use both.

The new Search Console addresses the most actionable insights by creating an interaction model which guides SEOs through the process of fixing any pending issues. GSC also added ability to share reports within an organization in order to simplify internal collaboration.

By Popular Demand: More Data!

The New Search Console expands the search query/landing page impression data to the new Search Performance report. In the past, GSC offered only 90 days of data in a report called Search Analytics. Data older than 90 days was wiped from the system with no way to recover.

With the new report, users now have access to 16 months of data, recovered from all historic data previously wiped. The increased time parameters make analyzing longer-term trends easier and enable year-over-year comparisons.

More data gives the big picture, in order to make actionable insights on your SEO campaign and its performance.

Index Coverage Report: Common Errors, What They Mean & How to Fix Them

Why is my site not ranking under important keywords? In order to rank on Google, Google must be able to index your content appropriately.

The new Index Coverage report provides insight into how Google indexes URLs on your website. If your site has errors, Google Search Console may have already emailed your webmaster. If you’ve recently received an Index Coverage report, you may be wondering how to resolve the errors on your site.

Note: The Index Coverage report works best for sites that submit sitemap files. Sitemap files inform search engines about new and updated URLs. Once you’ve submitted a sitemap file, you can use the sitemap filter over the Index Coverage data, so that you’re able to focus on an exact list of URLs.

Don’t panic! Many of the following errors found in the Index Coverage Report are harmless to your bottom line, and all are fixable with support of a web developer and/or hosting provider. Save time and money by prioritizing your site’s errors with the breakdown below.

Server error (5xx):

Redirect error:

Submitted URL blocked by robots.txt:

Submitted URL marked ‘noindex’:

Submitted URL seems to be a Soft 404:

Submitted URL returns unauthorized request (401):

Submitted URL not found (404):

Submitted URL has crawl issue:

Fixing Crawl Errors: How to Maintain & See SEO Results

I’ve corrected all of my site errors. When can I expect to see results from my SEO?

If your site had significant crawl errors on your end-user content, fixing these issues may quickly swing your site into positive organic keyword growth. For example, if your Products page was blocked by robots.txt file, it was as if you had your “Closed” sign up when you were open for business.

What’s next?

Protect your site from new errors by properly maintaining your SEO. New Search Console is set up to report alerts when the platform detects new issues and helps you monitor their fix.

Often, fixing Search issues involves multiple teams within a company. Giving the right people access to information about your site’s index status is critical to improving an implementation quickly. Within most reports in Search Console, the share button on top of the report creates a shareable link to the report so the right person on your team can address and resolve.

The new Search Console can also help you confirm that you’ve resolved an issue, and will inform Google to update their index accordingly. To do this, select a flagged issue, and click “validate fix”. Google will then crawl and reprocess the affected URLs with a higher priority, helping your site to get back on track faster than ever.

More Features to Come!

New Google Search Console will be rolling out new features throughout 2018 to make a permanent home for Search Console. We’ll be on the cutting-edge of providing insight to best serve our clients as Google continues development of GSC.

Does your site rank lower than it should on Google? You need an SEO agency that uses a data-driven approach to resolve your site errors with attention to your time and resources. Contact us today by filling out our contact form, or giving us a call at 404.751.1043.

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