Hiiii DP, If You have an idea about this just AVOID this message -You can find out the pages displayed for corresponding query!!!! Suppose your site pages may not display on first few pages for a specific search, you can check whether your site pages are present or not in search result; For that we can use this method -------> site:domain.xxx keyword(OR Query) Eg:site:Google.com doodle source -------------------- Google Webmaster Help Center -Sumeshnarmath
Dear Sumeshnarmath I don't know where you find this information. However I would like to correct you on this syntax: site:domain.xxx keyword This syntax is used to search whether the website contains this keyword or not. This never shows your website ranking status on SERP on that particular keyword...
OK.... we can't get the position (ie, SERP) corresponding to the keyword or query. But we can find out how many pages are present for a specific query…. It is clearly described in Google webmaster help center
By this syntax you can find out how many pages of your website contain that particular keyword... eg. You have a website xyz.com and you want to search a keyword say "free" in your website. Then you can search it using: site:xyz.com free And this will give you a list of pages of your website that have contained that keyword 'free'. If that keyword is not present in you whole website, the query will return nothing...
This is correct..but read it from the starting..what exactly written over there. Also check this http://www.google.com/help/operators.html#site
It does not mean that exactly. That operator is used to know; - If your web pages have the keyword in it or not, this helps you know and fix. For example: If you are dreaming to get ranked for buy LA dog beds and when you search for it you were not able to find your website in results, then do a search "site:softbeds.com la dog beds" (no quotes) This will show if your website pages has got that key phrase in them and if you do not find then it means STOP trying to searching and optimise your web page with that (desired) keyword (assuming that page is relevant to your targeted key phrase). This also helps you in finding pages with duplicate TITLES. It depends on how you UTILIZE the results for your analysis. It does NOt Guarantee or does NOT MEAN that resulting pages are ranked for those keywords.
I think what Google is trying to say is that if your pages contain a certain keyword (any keyword) that page can possibly rank and rank higher by obtaining additional backlinks to that page.
That is what it says, Person A - searching for - glittery flip flops - could not find his site in search results. Now he is sad. Google: Dear, are you sure you have any web page in your website which has content related to glittery flip flops? do you have it in title. If you are not sure, check using site: url.com keyword you will see the pages which has that particular keyword if you do not see it and wants to rank for it then add it and optimize it and get quality back links to it in order to gain better rankings. Other way: Person A - searched using site: operator with a keyword Google - Displays 1 results This means, dear this page has that keyword, now improve it and if some quality sites link to this page it will gain rankings (now thats tempting)