Hi Greg,
You can access your campaign keywords in the Rankings section of your campaign.
https://moz.com/help/moz-pro/rankings/overview
We hope that helps
Welcome to the Q&A Forum
Browse the forum for helpful insights and fresh discussions about all things SEO.
Hi Greg,
You can access your campaign keywords in the Rankings section of your campaign.
https://moz.com/help/moz-pro/rankings/overview
We hope that helps
Hi, thanks for posting.
Can you please reach out to the Support Team with your account details? You can contact them at help@moz.com
thanks
Hi,
You may want to look over this documentation on Indexing. That may help answer your question.
https://moz.com/help/link-explorer/link-building/moz-isnt-finding-your-links
thanks!
Hi - thanks for posting.
When I check the DA of that site, its neither 0 or 70. Are you checking it in Link Explorer?
Thanks for posting. This Help article can probably address all your questions
https://moz.com/help/link-explorer/link-building/moz-isnt-finding-your-links
We hope that helps!
Thanks for posting. This Help article can probably address all your questions
https://moz.com/help/link-explorer/link-building/moz-isnt-finding-your-links
We hope that helps!
Hey - Thanks for posting.
We can certainly take a look at why we are reporting that. Can you contact support at help@moz.com with your specific campaign and example pages?
thanks!
To calculate DA, we index the web by following links using a crawler. Our crawler is built on a machine-learning based model that is optimized to select pages like those that appear in our collection of Google SERPs. We feed the machine learning model with features of the URL like the backlink counts for the URL and the PLD (pay-level domains), features about the URL like its length and how many subdirectories it has, and features on the quality of the domains linking to the URL and PLD. So, it's not based on any one particular metric, but we're training the crawler to start with high-value links.
In terms of improving your Domain Authority, with the information above in mind, it's best to look at both you on-page SEO to make sure you've covered the basics.
Then you also want to look at your off-site SEO and building more links more links to your site.
There are lots of different areas of Link Building to explore, from patching up broken links, improving your internal link profile, and good ol' fashioned content creation.
Here is a great video by our founder Rand which goes over some easy link building tactics to get you started.
Our crawler works by parsing the source code of your site, looking at HTML elements. If your site is primarily Javascript, then the data you get back with regards to the crawl report won't be completely accurate because of this. There's no real workaround that I can recommend for this one, since it is a technical limitation of our tools, but there are some good blog posts and discussions in the Q&A about this if you head over to our Help Hub.
While the tools and data that rely on our crawl of your site may not return the best results because of that Javascript, your keyword rankings and link profile should work just fine.
You might also want to check out a few tools that are compatible with Javascript, like Botify or Screaming Frog.
https://www.onely.com/tools/wwjd/ is also a handy tool that makes it super easy to see where links are added or removed by javascript.
So, Moz's Spam Score is the percentage of sites with similar features we've found to be penalized or banned by Google (it's not based on the spam score of the sites linking to you). To improve this score I would recommend reading our guide which explains the 27 factors used to make up this score. You can then look at your site and investigate areas you would like to improve on your site: https://moz.com/help/link-explorer/link-building/spam-score
Best of luck, and let me know if I can help with anything else!
Hi Dougal!
We don't have any record of support requests coming from the email associated with your Moz Pro account. Can you let us know how you are reaching out (contact form or emailing us directly at help@moz.com)?
Unfortunately, we do not use a static IP address or range of IP addresses, as we have designed our crawler to have a dynamic approach. This means we use thousands of dynamic IP addresses which will change each time we run a crawl. This approach gives us the best dynamic view of the web, but it can make us incompatible with some servers or hosting providers. The best option I'd be able to suggest would be to identify our crawler by User-agent: rogerbot
You can read more about rogerbot in our guide.
Look forward to hearing back!
Hi - Thanks for posting.
Domain Authority is a ranking score developed by Moz. Domain Authority is not a metric used by Google in determining search rankings and has no effect on the SERPs.
You can learn more here: https://moz.com/learn/seo/domain-authority
Best regards,
Its totally possible that other crawlers can index something, that we are blocked from indexing. I would suggest reaching out to the Support Team with some specific examples so we can see whats going on.
Best,
Hi - Thanks for posting,
The report linked above is from 2016, which was prior to us completely rebuilding our link index crawler that was launched in 2018 https://moz.com/blog/link-explorer.
After being found, newly discovered links have the ability to be populated into our index in about 3 days. However, there are a lot of factors that can affect our ability to find and index links to your site. It's important to note that we are always adding new data to our index, but it may take some time for us to discover backlinks to your site based on factors like crawlability of the referring pages, quality of the links, and the referring pages, and more.
If you are not seeing links that you know you have, you can add them to Link Tracking Lists. Once you add a link to your tracking lists we will add that page to be crawled. As long as it is accessible to our crawler, you should see the link in our index as soon as we can index those pages.
Lastly, I have a great guide here with some things to check around why we may not have found your links yet: https://moz.com/help/link-explorer/link-building/moz-isnt-finding-your-links
Best
Hi - Thanks for posting.
There are many reasons why we cant crawl/index your entire site, but it's hard to diagnose without looking at a specific example. Can you please contact support at help@moz.com with the domain in question? That way we can take a look.
Best,
There are a lot of factors that can affect our ability to find and index links to your site. It's important to note that we are always adding new data to our index, but it may take some time for us to discover backlinks to your site based on factors like the crawlability of the referring pages, quality of the links, and the referring pages, and more.
If you are not seeing links that you know you have, you may want to make sure that they can be indexed. It is also a good idea to check to see if we've indexed the page on which that link is found. If we haven't indexed the referring page yet, you won't see your link in our index.
Lastly, I have a great guide here with some things to check around why we may not have found your links yet: https://moz.com/help/link-explorer/link-building/moz-isnt-finding-your-links
Hi - Thanks for posting.
The ranking keywords section of Keyword Explorer is powered by a different corpus than other parts of the tool. Although this keyword corpus is large, it doesn't include all keywords so there may be keywords you're checking elsewhere in our tool suite (like Rank Checker) that have not been added to our ranking keywords corpus just yet.
This corpus will continue to grow, though, and although I'm not able to provide an ETA at this time you may see those keywords included at a later date. If you'd like to track those additional keywords that aren't in the corpus just yet, I would suggest adding them to a Campaign. That way you can continue to track your rankings for them over time.
Best,
Hi Carine - Thanks for posting.
I'm afraid we do not have any type of embedding for third party sites at this time. Sorry for that inconvenience.
Best,
Hi John - Thanks for posting
Moz is starting at HTTP, so if you check httpstatus.io from HTTP, you will see a 301 to a 403 response. You would want to have your developer check to see if they are blocking our user-agent "rogerbot" or any AWS IP's because it doesn't look like we can crawl past the root domain.
If you need further assistance, feel free to reach out to help@moz.com.