Discover, analyze, get recomendations and fix Basic Technical SEO Issues now with 25+ tools and reports from the SEO Book Pro Beta Technical SEO and Website Audit Dashboard.
View All Dashboard Beta ToolsSEO Book Pro Nightly Alpha Documentation
Documentation
View the Full DocumentationSEO Book Pro - Server Database Status
FREE Basic SEO Audit
Basic Free Site Audit and Analyze Website for Technical and SEO Errors
Recent Posts ( 123 )
Dashboard Documentation ( 36 files )
- Introduction
- Audit Dashboard
- Main Dashboard
- Structured Data
- Your website on Google
- How Google Works
- SEO starter guide
- Guidelines
- Do you need an SEO?
- Maintaining your site
- Developer's guide
- Sitemaps
- robots.txt
- Meta tags
- Crawler management
- Removals
- Canonical URLs
- Site moves
- Redirects
- JavaScript SEO
- Multilingual sites
- Title links
- Snippets
- Images
- Videos
- Structured data
- Business details
- Favicons
- Publication dates
- Search Appearance
- Page experience
- Navigation structures
- Pagination loading
- HTTPS
- Mobile-friendliness
- Interstitials and dialogs
- View all SEO Topics
Latest Brand and Domains Audits ( 44 )
Technical SEO And Websites Audit ( 3 Guides)
Archives for Category: Google
30 questions regarding why you need to start visit and use the SEO Book Pro
What is the SEO Book Pro? Why is it important to have a website audit tool? What are the benefits
Read the rest on -> 30 questions regarding why you need to start visit and use the SEO Book ProGoogle Search Operator – site:.edu “text goes here”
Finally, you can target just the Top-Level Domain (TLD), by leaving out the root domain. This is more useful for
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – site:.edu “text goes here”Google Search Operator – site:example.com filetype:pdf
One of the drawbacks of “inurl:” is that it will match any string in the URL. So, for example, searching
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – site:example.com filetype:pdfGoogle Search Operator – site:example.com intext:”text goes here”
The “intext:” operator looks for keywords in the body of the document, but doesn’t search the tag. The text could
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – site:example.com intext:”text goes here”Google Search Operator – site:example.com “text goes here” -intitle:”text goes here”
You might think that #22 and #23 are the same, but there’s a subtle difference. If you use “intext:”, Google
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – site:example.com “text goes here” -intitle:”text goes here”Google Search Operator – “text goes here” -site:example.com
If you want to get a bit more sophisticated, you can use “-site:” and exclude mentions of copy on any
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – “text goes here” -site:example.comGoogle Search Operator – intitle:”text goes here”
This one’s not really a “site:” combo, but it’s so useful that I had to include it. Are you suspicious
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – intitle:”text goes here”Google Search Operator – site:example.com intitle:”text * here”
You can use almost any of the variations mentioned in (12)-(17) with “intitle:” – I won’t list them all, but
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – site:example.com intitle:”text * here”Google Search Operator – site:example.com intitle:”text goes here”
The “intitle:” operator only matches text that appears in the tag. One of the first spot-checks I do on any
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – site:example.com intitle:”text goes here”Google Search Operator – site:example.com ~word
The tilde [~] operator tells Google to find words related to the word in question. Let’s say you wanted to
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – site:example.com ~wordGoogle Search Operator – site:example.com ~word -word
By using [-] to exclude the specific word, you can tell Google to find any pages related to the concept
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – site:example.com ~word -wordGoogle Search Operator – site:example.com “top 7..10 ways”
If you have a specific range of numbers in mind, you can use “X..Y” to return anything in the range
Read the rest on -> Google Search Operator – site:example.com “top 7..10 ways”