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Can Google PR6 or above Link to UR site get you indexed within 24 hrs

Explain if you have experienced it, done it then share it ...

         

adeel shahid

9:56 pm on Sep 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



For any website NEW or OLD, Google says if you have experienced problems like your page has'nt indexed or is'nt in Google results than you probably should place a link on internet so we can get to your site ...

Question is can you get your site indexed inside google in less than 24 hours by simple LINK, or someone knows another way to get indexed within 24 hours, please share.

stuartc1

4:07 pm on Sep 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Some PR6 sites are not regulary indexed - usually they are, but not always.

If the site in question is indexed each day (perhaps several times per day) - then google will know about your site within 24 hours. But this is not going to get your site indexed within 24 hours.

It could take anything from 3 days to 3 weeks before google start to index your site and should the results. In some cases much longer or never.

But the general rule is high PR sites usually get indexed more often than lower PR sites, which means you have a better chance of having your URL in there bot visit list.

aris1970

4:24 pm on Sep 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Whenever I want to have Google crawl a new website, I put a link on another PR6 website we have. The PR6 website is spidered everyday so most of the times Google crawls AND indexes the new website within 72 hours.

Wizard

6:54 pm on Sep 17, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I get the same with PR 4 site.

CernyM

5:20 am on Sep 18, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



When linked from a quality PR5 page, my new sites typically get indexed relatively soon after the new link is discovered. Sometimes in less than an hour. A full scan usually occurs the next day.

doc

5:33 am on Sep 18, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



When I have a new site or new page to get indexed I have on occasion looked for a guestbook with a recent date and posted the link there. It seems to work quite well.

Beachboy

6:09 am on Sep 18, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



And then your newly-indexed site is sandboxed...for maybe a year?

rkhare

12:40 pm on Sep 18, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



And then your newly-indexed site is sandboxed...for maybe a year?

what does it means, can anyone explain?

JoeHouse

9:14 pm on Sep 18, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



<And then your newly-indexed site is sandboxed...for maybe a year?>

Popular belief has it that if you get too many links too fast or if you go out and buy high PR links google will put you in the sandbox.

The sandbox is sort of a penalty box for new websites where you are monitored closely by Google and you are not being indexed for your most relevant and important keywords.

After about anywhere from 6 months to a year you will sit in this box and play without much happening.

Now from my experience there is some kind of filter for new sites where you are prevented from jumping into the serps and play with the big boys right away.

From my experience I was put in the box right away without having many links at all and 8 months later I am still in it.

The best thing to do is just continue business as normal, do all the thing to build your online business and don't worry about what the search eninges might do.

Because there is really not much you can do if they decide to sandbox you.

Hope this info has helped.

ScottD

2:52 pm on Sep 19, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



We put a link on our PR6 site to our new site and it was in the cache about a week later. Our PR6 site is only spidered every few days, as it doesn't change too much, so in that sense a PR4 or 5 site could easily be just as useful, if they are regularly spidered (news sites for example)

Building links gradually is the natural way of things, so thats why G gets suspicious of sudden link jumps, but also theres no doubt older sites are valued more highly anyway in the results. This can be comforting when you've spent years building your site but frustrating when you are trying to launch something new. Being in the cache doesn't mean showing in the results anywhere really - you can count on several months passing before that starts and then a lot more if your area is highly competed. Focusing on niche phrases might be an idea until your site is more established

BigDave

3:03 pm on Sep 19, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The page that you link to can get into the index within a few days or even hours if the link is placed on a regularly crawled page.

How soon the site is indexed depends on a lot more than that. I generally plan on getting a few pages indexed in the first week, but I never expect the entire site to be in the index for at least 3 months. It can happen quicker, but I don't plan on it.