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    4. Page Count in Webmaster Tools Index Status Versus Page Count in Webmaster Tools Sitemap

    Page Count in Webmaster Tools Index Status Versus Page Count in Webmaster Tools Sitemap

    Intermediate & Advanced SEO
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    • Kingalan1
      Kingalan1 last edited by

      Greeting MOZ Community:

      I run www.nyc-officespace-leader.com, a real estate website in New York City.

      The page count in Google Webmaster Tools Index status for our site is 850. The page count in our Webmaster Tools Sitemap is 637. Why is there a discrepancy between the two?

      What does the Google Webmaster Tools Index represent? If we filed a removal request for pages we did not want indexed, will these pages still show in the Google Webmaster Tools page count despite the fact that they no longer display in search results? The number of pages displayed in our Google Webmaster Tools Index remains at about 850 despite the removal request. Before a site upgrade in June the number of URLs in the Google Webmaster Tools Index and Google Webmaster Site Map were almost the same.

      I am concerned that page bloat has something to do with a recent drop in ranking.

      Thanks everyone!!

      Alan

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • William.Lau
        William.Lau last edited by

        Index status is how many pages Google has indexed of your site.

        Sitemap is different, incase your site has pages that are too deep for Google to find, sitemaps are created as a way to direct Googlebot to crawl pages that they won't necessarily find.

        In your case Google indexed more pages than the amount of pages in your sitemap, which is absolutely normal.

        Kingalan1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • KeriMorgret
          KeriMorgret last edited by

          It's best to just ask the same question once, and clarify if needed in the question itself. This seems real similar to the question you asked at http://moz.com/community/q/difference-in-number-of-urls-in-crawl-sitemaps-index-status-in-webmaster-tools-normal, unless I'm missing something.

          Kingalan1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Kingalan1
            Kingalan1 @William.Lau last edited by

            Thanks for your response.

            I am very suspicious that something is amiss. The number of URLs in MOZ's crawl of our site is about 850, almost exactly the same as is on the crawl of our site. This 850 includes no index pages.

            Is it normal for Google to show the total number of pages, even if they are no-index in The Webmaster Tools Index?

            I would upload the Excel file of the MOZ crawl but I don't know how to do so.

            Thanks,

            Alan

            William.Lau 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • William.Lau
              William.Lau @Kingalan1 last edited by

              Noindexed pages should not appear in your "Index Status". I could be wrong but it doesn't make sense to appear there if the page is noindexed.

              Doing a site:www.nyc-officespace-leader.com, I get 849 results. Seems normal to me. Again you would probably have to scrutinize your sitemap instead, sitemaps don't always pull all the URLs depending how on you get them.

              Based on Screaming Frog, you got about 860 pages and ~200 noindexed pages. Your index status may update eventually.

              Its working as is anyway, http://www.nyc-officespace-leader.com/blog/tag/manhattan-office-space

              Does not show up in SERPs. I wouldn't use Index Status as definitive but more as directional.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • AlanBleiweiss
                AlanBleiweiss last edited by

                There are many reasons this can be happening.

                One cause is where more URLs exist than your sitemap might even include.  So the question then is whether the sitemap file is accurate and includes all the pages you want indexed.

                Sometimes it's a coding or Information Architecture flaw. where content is found multiple ways.

                Doing a random check, I found you have listings showing up in three different ways

                • http://www.nyc-officespace-leader.com/listings/38-broad-street-between-beaver--manhattan-new-york
                • http://www.nyc-officespace-leader.com/113-133-west-18th-street
                • http://www.nyc-officespace-leader.com/inquire-about-the-ladders-137-varick-street-to-rent-office-space-in-ny

                See those? One has the address as a sub-page beneath "/listings/" the 2nd version does not, and the 3rd URL is entirely different altogether.  There should only be one URL structure for all property listings so this would cause me to wonder whether you have properties showing up with two different URLs.

                I didn't find duplication, yet it's a flawed URL issue that leaves me wondering if it's a contributing factor.

                This is just a scratching on the surface of possibilities.  I did check about blog tags and blog date archives, however none of those are indexed, so they're not a cause based on my preliminary evaluation.

                Kingalan1 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Kingalan1
                  Kingalan1 @AlanBleiweiss last edited by

                  Hi Alan:

                  Thanks for your response. Actually the 1st and 3rd URL are for buildings rather than listings, so they are actually formatted correctly.  All listings contain "/listings/".  So I think, but I am not an expert, that the URL structure is OK.

                  Thanks,
                  Alan

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Kingalan1
                    Kingalan1 @KeriMorgret last edited by

                    Hi Keri:

                    OK. I will keep that in mind moving forward. I did not realize the duplication.

                    If a question does not get answered are users allowed to repost?

                    Thanks,

                    Alan

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Kingalan1
                      Kingalan1 @AlanBleiweiss last edited by

                      Hi Alan:

                      Your hypothesis regarding the URL structure is interesting. But in this case two the URLs represent buildings and the one with "/listings/" represents a listings. SO that seems ok.

                      Now you mention the possibility that there may be URLs that do not appear in the site map and are getting indexed by Google. That there is a site map issue with the site. How could I determine this?

                      Could the additional 175 URLs that have appeared in the last two months contribute to a drop in ranking?

                      I am complete stumped on thus issue and have been harassing the MOZ community for two months. If you could help get the bottom of this I would be most grateful.

                      Thanks, Alan

                      AlanBleiweiss 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • AlanBleiweiss
                        AlanBleiweiss @Kingalan1 last edited by

                        It would require a developer to examine the structure of the site, how pages are generated - to do an inventory audit related to pages generated, then to match that to the sitemap file.  If there are a large number of pages that are duplicate content, or very thin on content, that could be a contributing factor. Since there's less than 1,000 pages indexed in Google, I don't think 175 would be enough by itself as a single factor.

                        There are many reasons that could be causing your problem.  Overall quality is another possible factor.  In a test I ran just now at URIValet.com, the page processing speed for the home page in the 1.5 mbps emulator was 13 seconds. Since Google has an ideal of under 3 seconds, if you have serious site-wide processing issues, that could also be a contributing factor. A test of a different page came back at 6 seconds, so this isn't necessarily a site-wide problem, and it may even be intermittent.

                        Yet if there are intermittent times when speeds are even slower, then yes, that could well be a problem that needs fixing.

                        So many other possible issues exist.  Are the property listings anywhere else on the web, or is the content you have on them exclusive to your site?

                        What about your link profile? Is it questionable?

                        Without a full blown audit it's a guess as to what the cause of your visibility drop problems are.

                        Kingalan1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • Kingalan1
                          Kingalan1 @AlanBleiweiss last edited by

                          Hi Alan:

                          Interesting tools, URIValet.com, I never heard of it before.

                          I reviewed site speed on Google Analytics and its seems that intermittently download speeds seem very slow. According to "Site Speed Timings" (see attached) there has been a  drop in download speed.

                          Is download speed a potentially more significant problem than the unknown 175 URLs?

                          Also, the listing do not appear elsewhere on the web. But many of them have light content. The call to action at the end of the listing is somewhat repetitive. I plan on either no-indexing listings with less than 100 words or adding to the content. The total number of listing URLs is 310. There are also 150 short building write ups URLs (like: http://www.nyc-officespace-leader.com/metropolitan-life-tower). These don't have more than 150 content. Could they be contributing to the issue?

                          Is the load time for the URLs on this site so slow that it could be affecting ranking?

                          Thanks,
                          Alan

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                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • AlanBleiweiss
                            AlanBleiweiss last edited by

                            thanks for the GA data - so - there's very little traffic to the site so Google isn't able to get accurate page speed data consistently every day.

                            Note however, that back around July 6th, the site-wide average was almost 40 seconds a page. That's extremely slow. Then on the 17th, it was up around 16 seconds site-wide.  So even though the little bit of data the rest of the month shows much faster speeds, those are definitely not good.

                            I honestly don't know however, given the very small data set, what impact site speed is having on the site. And there's just no way to know how it's impacting the site compared to other problems.

                            Next - thin content pages - what percentage of the listings has this problem?  When I go to a sample listing such as this one I see almost no content. If a significant number of listings you have are this severely thin, that could well be a major problem.

                            Again though, I don't believe in randomly looking at one, two or even a few individual things as a valid basis for making a wild guess as to exact causes.  SEO is not rocket science, however it is computer science.  It's complex and hundreds of main factors are involved.

                            Kingalan1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • Kingalan1
                              Kingalan1 @AlanBleiweiss last edited by

                              Hi Alan:

                              About maybe 220 pages of the 305 listings have thin content. Meaning less than 100 words.

                              Is that likely to have triggered a Panda 4.0 penalty in late May? If I add content to those pages of no-index them could that reverse the penalty if it exists.  Also my building pages contain 200-250 words. Is that considered "thin"? They are less geared towards the needs of tenants leasing space and contain historical information. I intend to enhance them and display listings on them. Do you think that could help?

                              Do you think the site speed could be a major factor impacting performance on my site? If so, I can invest in improving speed.

                              Thanks, Alan

                              AlanBleiweiss 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • AlanBleiweiss
                                AlanBleiweiss @Kingalan1 last edited by

                                As I already communicated, these are issues that MAY be causing your problems. Without direct access to Google's algorithms, there is zero guarantee that anyone could absolutely say with 100% certainty exactly what impact they are having.  And without a full audit, there is no way to know what other problems you have.

                                Having said that, proper SEO best practices always dictates that any major SEO flaws that you know exist should be cleaned up / fixed.  So - if two thirds of your listings have thin content, the best suggestion would be to work to add much more content to each of those (unique, highly relevant, trustworthy and helpful), or to consider a "noindex,nofollow" on those specific pages.

                                The problem then being if you noindex,nofollow that many pages, what do you have left in terms of overall site scale that Google would find worthy of high rankings?  How big are your competitors?  Taking away very thin pages helps reduce "low quality" signals, yet if there isn't other "high quality" volume of content you still don't solve all your problems most of the time.

                                200-250 words is NOT considered a strong volume of content in most cases.  Typically these days it's around the 600 words + range.  However that also depends on the majority of the competition for that unique type of content in that specific market.

                                And site speed is also something that best practices dictates needs to be as efficient as possible so if it's slow even intermittently, that would be another thing to definitely work on.

                                Kingalan1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • Kingalan1
                                  Kingalan1 @AlanBleiweiss last edited by

                                  Hi Alan:

                                  That is very clear, thanks!!

                                  For pages with thin content, why the "no-follow" in addition to the "no-index"? My SEO firm was also of the opinion that the thin content pages be "no-indexed" however they did not suggest a "no-follow" also.

                                  So I think I will work on improving site speed, enhancing content and no-indexing (and no following?) thin pages. If that does not induce an improvement I guess I will have to consider alternatives.

                                  Thanks,
                                  Alan

                                  AlanBleiweiss 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • AlanBleiweiss
                                    AlanBleiweiss @Kingalan1 last edited by

                                    Using the noindex,follow combination is a form of advanced page sculpting, which is not truly an SEO best practice.

                                    Here's why:

                                    If you deem a page not worthy of being in the Google index, attempting to say "it's not worthy of indexing, but the links on it are worthy" is a mixed message.

                                    Links to those other pages should already exist from pages you do want indexed.

                                    By doing noindex,follow, you increase the internal link counts in artificial ways.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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