Google Webmaster Tools: How to Get Your Site Verified

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video of google webmaster tools Google Webmaster Tools is one of the hidden secrets on Google. Use this to add your site directly to its index, verify that Google sees your site (and sub-domains), and also fix the errors it has identified. Split testing has shown me that sites indexed this way perform better than sites that rely on xml sitemaps. FYI you can also add sitemaps here.

How to Get Your Site Verified By Google

Blogs created in Blogger are automatically verified in Webmaster Tools. However, older blogs, WordPress and Typepad blogs are not automatically verified, and should be verified using the meta tag method.

To verify your Blogger / WordPress blog:

1.    On the Webmaster Tools home page, click Add a site.
2.    Enter your blog’s URL e.g. (http://ivanwalsh.blogspot.com) and click Continue.
3.    On the Verification page, select the Meta tag verification method and copy the meta tag provided into your text editor.
4.    Sign in to Blogger.com (or WordPress).

For Blogger, open the Dashboard, click the Layout link for the blog you are verifying.

5.    On the Layout tab, click Edit HTML.
6.    Paste the meta tag  after the <head> element in the template HTML and click Save template.
7.    On the Manage Verification page in Webmaster Tools, confirm that Meta tag is selected as the verification method, and then click the Verify

For WordPress and TypePad blogs:

8.    Save the Google code to a HTML file.
9.    FTP it to the root directory.
10.    On the Manage Verification page in Webmaster Tools, confirm that Meta tag is selected as the verification method, and then click the Verify.
11.    If successful, a message appears. Woohoo!

Where is Google Webmaster Tools

It’s here https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/home?hl=en

Did this work for you? Let me know if you have any problems.

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  • http://notcolin.wordpress.com/ Colum McAndrew

    Spot on Ivan. I use Visio all the time for complex (and even simple) workflows. Sometimes our UI gets too clever for its own good making it difficult for users to understand the process. A flowchart that allows for all the possible scenarios makes things so much easier to explain.

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    Hi Colum,
    I’ve started to use off-page connectors to link complex maps together. Some are so dense, the only way to get it mapped it create one master map and then small sub-maps.

  • http://notcolin.wordpress.com Colum McAndrew

    I remember having to do that in one scenario a few years ago. It works well. Not too dissimilar to using DHTML effects or hyperlinks I guess.

  • Anonymous

    Heyy thanks for sharing this information. Definitely this will help a lot. I’ve used Visio templates and still learning to create such complex diagrams. Those who are looking for such visio templates and add ins can download them at visiotoolbox http://visiotoolbox.com/2010/visio-download.aspx

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    Thanks Jess,
    I’ll add more Microsoft Visio templates next week.

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    Have to look into DHTML :) haven’t been into code for ages

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