How to use google webmaster tool


Ever wonder why your blog shows up where it does in the Google search rankings? With our new Webmaster Tools integration that information is just a click or two away.

Webmaster Tools is a Google service that provides you with detailed information about your website’s visibility to Google’s search engine. You can see how often Google’s web crawlers visit your site, find out who links to your site, what searches are used to find your site, and even control how your page appears in the Google web results.



1. First you need verifier you blog:
Add your URL blog then verify your blog it will generate code for you.
You have to put in in your blog >>setting >>edit HTML.
Put the code below "Head" then click verify.


2.Second you need submit your sitemap
After that go to add sitemap
Sselect add general web sitemap
Then fill xttp://xxx.blogspot.com/atom.xml YOu have to fill atom.xml
Then fill xttp://xxx.blogspot.com/rss.xml YOu have to fill rss.xml
Then put submit
You don't need to upload anything it is the different way to submit between blog and web site

3. With file robot.txt
In blogger you can't upload the robots.txt file, but you can use the robots meta tag to control the crawling of bots on particular files.

Several next day you can view data on webmaster tool:

4. Statistics

The next tab is the statistics tab. When you open this, the first thing you'll see is a table showing "The PageRank of your pages in Google", and a table showing the page with the highest pagerank for the last three months. I don't think this data is very interesting, especially because PageRank is only shown as High, Medium, Low or "Not yet assigned". If these things change heavily though, and you weren't expecting them to change, you might want to take a look at your IBL's.
Something else in this tab is a lot more interesting, though you might have gathered this data using other tools.

5. The Links tab

The tab with, in my opinion, the best information in Google Webmaster Tools for an SEO is the links tab. This shows an overview of all the pages on your site which Google has found links to, and the amount of links it has found to these pages. Clicking on the number next to the page URL shows the specific page Google has found the link towards that page on.
I use this data regularly to check on which links Google has indexed, and how many links I have gathered with my new tools, link-bait actions etc.

6. Conclusion

If you use Google Webmaster Tools like this regularly, you'll be aware of any (indexing) problems with your site in time, and have a thorough understanding of how your site is doing. Make sure you add this to your weekly routine!

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