Google Webmaster Tools provides you with detailed reports about your pages' visibility on Google. To get started, simply add and verify your site,Now How To Use Google Web Master Tool To Improve My Websites or Blog Viewers In Google
First starting with how to add your website or blog in web master tool
1. First
Goto Google Web Master Site https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/
2. Now
Add Your Site By Clicking On ADD SITE
3. Now
Enter Your Site URL In Add Site Window
4. And
Then Click On your URL that will appear on home
window
Now Add your Website or Blog Sitemap
§ What Is Site Map
A site map (or sitemap)
is a list of pages of a web site accessible to crawlers or users. It can be
either a document in any form used as a planning tool for Web design, or a Web page that lists
the pages on a Web site, typically
organized in hierarchical fashion.
There are two popular
versions of a site map. An XML Sitemap is a structured format that a user
doesn't need to see, but it tells the search engine about the pages in your
site, their relative importance to each other, and how often they are updated.
HTML sitemaps are designed for the user to help them find content on the page,
and don't need to include each and every subpage. This helps visitors and search engine bots find pages on
the site.
While some developers
argue that site index is a more appropriately used term to
relay page function, web visitors are used to seeing each term and generally
associate both as one and the same. However, a site index is often used to mean
an A-Z index that provides access to particular content, while a site map
provides a general top-down view of the overall site contents.
§ First
Goto Crawl
>> Sitemaps > ADD/TEST
SITEMAP
§ If
your web site or blog pages are Less than 500
then write sitemap as
§ If
your web site or blog pages are More than 500
then write sitemap as
Index Status
What is Index Status?
The Index Status page provides stats about how many of your URLs
Google was able to crawl and/or index. More information about how Google crawls and indexes the web.
View the Index Status page:
1. On the Webmaster Tools home page, click the site you want.
2. On the Dashboard, click Google Index, and then click Index Status.
The Basic tab displays the following data:
§ Total indexed: The total number of
URLs currently in Google's index. These URLs are available to appear in search
results, along with other URLs Google may discover by other means. This number
will change over time, as new pages are added and indexed, and old pages are
removed. The number of indexed URLs is almost always significantly smaller than
the number of crawled URLs, because it does not include URLs that have been
identified as duplicates or non-canonical, or less useful, or that contain a meta noindex tag.
To see basic data plus additional useful information, click Advanced. Click
the checkbox next to the data you want, and then click Update. The following additional
data is available:
§ Ever crawled: The cumulative total of URLs on your site that Google has ever
crawled. Not all crawled URLs get indexed, and Google may discover some URLs by
other means such as inbound links from other sites. This number should increase
over time as new pages are added to your site.
·
Blocked by robots: The total number of URLs that Google cannot crawl because they
are disallowed in your robots.txt file.
Search Queries
Search queries data
includes the following:
·
Queries: The total number of search queries that returned pages from
your site over the given period.
·
Query list: Specific user queries for which your site appeared in
search results. Webmaster Tools shows data for the top 2,000 queries that returned
your site at least once or twice in search results in the selected period. This
list reflects any filters you’ve set (for example, a search query for [flowers] on
google.ca is counted separately from a query for [flowers] on
google.com).
·
Impressions: The number of times pages from your site appeared in search
results, and the percentage increase/decrease in the daily average impressions
compared to the previous period. The number of days per period defaults to 30,
but you can change it at any time. (These numbers can be rounded, and may not
be exact.)
·
Clicks:
The number of times a user clicked your site's listing in search results for a
particular query, and the percentage increase/decrease in the average daily
clicks compared to the previous period. (These numbers can be rounded, and may
not be exact.)
·
CTR (clickthrough rate): The percentage of impressions that resulted
in a click to your site, and the number of percentage points increase or
decrease in the daily average CTR compared to the previous period. For example,
if your CTR went from 40% to 30%, this column would show a change of -10.
·
Average position: The average top position of your site on the search results
page for that query, and the change compared to the previous period. Green
indicates that your site's average top position is improving.
To calculate average
position, we take into account the top ranking URL from your site your site for
a particular query. For example, if Jane’s query returns your site as the #1
and #2 result, and David’s query returns your site in positions #2 and #7, your
average top position would be 1.5.
You
can view up to 90 days of historical data. However, you can only see change
data for time periods of 30 days or less.
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