Print

Print


A new submission to Google, even with utilizing the sitemap tool
will not likely show up in google searches for several weeks, and
many new site submissions take several months to show up to get
out of Google's "sandbox".  To my knowledge there is no way to
speed this up.
 
I'd be interested in what others have found.
 
-Russell
 


  _____  

From: MSU Network Administrators Group [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Bill Park
Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2007 9:45 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [MSUNAG] Googlebot & SEO


Hello All,

Recently we implemented a new site for the Plant Biology department.  We used WordPress as our CMS.  I installed this Google Sitemap
Generator plugin for WordPress so that the site would get properly indexed by Google.  After getting many complaints about the site
not being found as a search result on Google I decided to have the plugin rebuild the sitemap.  Once I did that I realized the
permissions on the 2 .xml files were not correct and were not writable.  So I 777'd those 2 sitemap files used by my plugin and it
rebuilt the sitemap but I was still not having any luck with Plant Biology showing up from a search query.  

Next I got on Google Webmaster's Tools to verify the site.  I uploaded the HTML file as instructed by Google and verified the site
flawlessly.  Next I also manually uploaded the sitemap to Google and let it verify that,  it verified and said it submitted roughly
278 URLS (which seems about right.)

The next day I checked on webmasters tools again to see what Googlebot was crawling and it was returning "robots.txt unreachable"
and then would postpone the crawling of our site.  Assuming robots.txt files were simply for exclusions only I hadn't created one.
After seeing that error message I decided to make one.  The robots.txt file  I created was permitting of all agents to crawl all
aspects of our site.  After creating the robots.txt file and checking back with webmaster tools multiple time it looks as though the
Googlebot has many no further progress.  

I was curious to see if anyone else had ever experienced anything like this or could offer me any insight into how I can get us on
the map quickly with Google and other search engines despite having the robots file that permits everything full access to the site.

Thanks.

Bill Park from Plant Biology.