We consistently hear from webmasters that they have to prioritize
their time. Some manage dozens or hundreds of clients’ sites; others run
their own business and may only have an hour to spend on website
maintenance in between managing finances and inventory. To help you
prioritize your efforts, Webmaster Tools is introducing the idea of
“site health,” and we’ve redesigned the Webmaster Tools home page to
highlight your sites with health problems. This should allow you to
easily see what needs your attention the most, without having to click
through all of the reports in Webmaster Tools for every site you manage.
Here’s what the new home page looks like:
You
can see that sites with health problems are shown at the top of the
list. (If you prefer, you can always switch back to listing your sites
alphabetically.) To see the specific issues we detected on a site, click
the site health icon or the “Check site health” link next to that site:
This
new home page is currently only available if you have 100 or fewer
sites in your Webmaster Tools account (either verified or unverified).
We’re working on making it available to all accounts in the future. If
you have more than 100 sites, you can see site health information at the
top of the Dashboard for each of your sites.
Right now we include three issues in your site’s health check:
- Have we detected malware on the site?
- Have any important pages been removed via our URL removal tool?
- Are any of your important pages blocked from crawling in robots.txt?
You
can click on any of these items to get more details about what we
detected on your site. If the site health icon and the “Check site
health” link don’t appear next to a site, it means that we didn’t detect
any of these issues on that site (congratulations!).
A word about “important pages:” as you know, you can get a comprehensive list of all URLs that have been removed by going to Site configuration > Crawler access > Remove URL; and you can see all the URLs that we couldn’t crawl because of robots.txt by going to Diagnostics > Crawl errors > Restricted by robots.txt.
But since webmasters often block or remove content on purpose, we only
wanted to indicate a potential site health issue if we think you may
have blocked or removed a page you didn’t mean to, which is why we’re
focusing on “important pages.” Right now we’re looking at the number of
clicks pages get (which you can see in Your site on the web > Search queries) to determine importance, and we may incorporate other factors in the future as our site health checks evolve.
Obviously
these three issues—malware, removed URLs, and blocked URLs—aren’t the
only things that can make a website “unhealthy;” in the future we’re
hoping to expand the checks we use to determine a site’s health, and of
course there’s no substitute for your own good judgment and knowledge of
what’s going on with your site. But we hope that these changes make it
easier for you to quickly spot major problems with your sites without
having to dig down into all the data and reports.
After you’ve
resolved any site health issues we’ve flagged, it will usually take
several days for the warning to disappear from your Webmaster Tools
account, since we have to recrawl the site, see the changes you’ve made,
and then process that information through our Web Search and Webmaster
Tools pipelines. If you continue to see a site health warning for that
site after a week or so, the issue may not have been resolved. Feel free
to ask for help tracking it down in our Webmaster Help Forum... and let us know what you think!
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