
Add your site as a new property in Google webmaster tools and Google analytics. You can take steps using Google services to try to “force” your site to be indexed. If it has been more than a few days since your site should have been indexed, it’s possible that it simply hasn’t been given any attention. It doesn’t do anyone any good if Google indexes a page that then changes completely before it even has time to circulate. They monitor pages for a short time to see if they’re changing frequently. First, they want to prevent pages from being indexed as good and then being edited to be malicious. If your site is brand new, Google will be indexing it at a slower pace before they add it to their main search index. There’s no official link between social networks and Google, not since the Twitter firehose debacle, but Google still crawls and indexes selections of social media, which shows them new content.Īnything that makes it difficult or impossible for Google to find a piece of content is a roadblock that can prevent your articles from showing up in the Google search index.
#Not all my movies are showing up in google play update#
When you update that site map, Google will notice and will check the new pages.

Giving this to Google means Google has an easy list of every page on your site. When you build a sitemap, you’re building a complete list of all of the pages on your site.

Go into your blog CMS and look for your post. If you’re used to saving posts as drafts and publishing them later, or saving them as drafts with a publication date in the future, this could be your problem. One of the more common reasons why you might not be able to find your post is that you “published” it as a saved draft rather than a published, live piece. Typically, though, this won’t be the problem modern caches are good at checking for incremental changes. On some browsers this just means hitting F5, or hitting ctrl+F5 or shift+F5.

Simply force a refresh of the page that refreshes the cache. The solution to this is as simple as the problem is rare. Your new post is live, but you can’t see it. You visit your homepage, but your cache hasn’t expired, so your browser doesn’t check to see if the page has changed. The simplest possible issue, albeit a rare cause for this problem, is simply that your local cached version of your own website doesn’t have the new post.
