Unrealistically fast pages indexing. Google has gone crazy?

Started by Newport, Sep 15, 2022, 02:41 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

NewportTopic starter

Greetings everyone! I have undertaken various content projects and noticed a recurring phenomenon. After publishing articles, they are often indexed within a span of two hours. This happens across different subjects and websites that contain around 300-400 articles each. These sites primarily feature informational articles as opposed to news. It begs the question: has Google altered its approach to indexing sites and made it quicker? Alternatively, could it be that my content is deemed suitable and desirable by Google? Have any of you experienced this before?

It's quite bizarre. One day, I uploaded a couple of articles, took a quick break, and returned to find them already in the index. It's both impressive and unnerving. In terms of content, it consists of a hundred unique articles with a length of 1.5-2.5K. The water content is at 20%, while spaminess is at 20%.
  •  

-DM-

What's the issue exactly? You have a great index, so sit back and relish it. Although this seems sort of unusual. It could be because of your site's content uniqueness that exceeds 100% or because you've included an abundance of appropriate keywords. Or perhaps your authors are producing incredibly beneficial content for society.
  •  

_AnnA_

I'm assuming that you have one or more sites on Wordpress, which has a fantastic feature under the "Writings" section in the Settings tab called "Update Services." Whenever you publish a new article, WP automatically notifies the relevant update control service sites. If you'd like to learn more about this, check out WP's "Update Tracking Services" piece in their Code. Be sure to list each service address on a new line and include http://rpc.pingomatic.com/.

Furthermore, this feature will grab the attention of Google's bots, which have become much faster in recent times. While it may seem impressive yet unnerving, rest assured that this process is perfectly normal and meant to enhance your site's visibility.
  •  

NewportTopic starter

Quote from: -DM- on Sep 15, 2022, 04:07 AMSo what's the problem?
That's the point, which is a little scary. But come on, we'll get over it. I think the developers in the latest update added something.
Quote from: _AnnA_ on Sep 15, 2022, 04:50 AMI assume you have a site(s) on Wordpress
DLE sites. DataLife Engine. It's a proprietary CMS. Not WordPress.
  •  

Term

Now the robots are quickly picking up good content and no problems with the indexing of a good site.
Most likely, the developers of your system have added, on the model of WP, the function of forced notification of search engines.
Well well, the main thing is that there are no problems with monetization of traffic. :)
  •  

Cody Babcock

If we compare it with the site indexing system now and, say, 6 years ago, then the difference is obvious - indexing has accelerated many times, of course, the robot still looks melancholy at new sites.
Regarding the crazy index - yes, this happens, but not so often. When I adapt to a search robot, my articles, or rather key phrases, shoot out 5-6 hours after publication. P.s. the new algorithms are good for longreads with water up to 24% and spam up to 21% with 70-120 uniques.
  •  
    The following users thanked this post: Ali_Pro

jobtardis

In the past, I observed that after writing an article, it would be indexed by Google within 20 minutes. Although it was remarkable, my happiness only lasted for a short while since the article would then slowly shift down to the third or fifth page of search results. On a new blog that was only two months old, one of my articles appeared on the fifth page before gradually climbing up to the first and even reaching the top three at times. However, it's worth noting that the search queries were of low or mid-range visibility, which explains it.

It seems that indexing patterns can be fluctuating and unpredictable. Although it's great to see immediate results, maintaining visibility requires more than just a speedy indexation process. Consistently producing high-quality content and optimizing it with appropriate keywords can help boost your search engine ranking in the long run.
  •  

anilkh7058

If the pages are visited by Google crawler, and its content and meaning is analyzed by Google crawler then page is indexed in Google.
In Google indexing quality issue occures in such as if your content is not sufficient, content is not unique, then it will be hard to index your page on Google.
software development company
  •  

rahul verma

Go to Google Search Console.
Navigate to the URL inspection tool.
Paste the URL you'd like Google to index into the search bar.
Wait for Google to check the URL.
Click the "Request indexing" button (if not already indexed)