Google Fetch & Render Partial Status
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Hi all,
Just started a new website last Saturday, have been using Google webmaster tools to crawl my site daily and use the fetch and render tool to do this.
So far, after each fetch and render attempt the status is always “partial” and never “complete”. When I expand to see the details, here’s what it tells me:
“Googlebot couldn’t get all resources for this page. Here’s a list:
URL Type Reason SeverityScript Blocked Low robots.txt
https://sb.scorecardresearch.com/beacon.js
Script Blocked Low robots.txt
https://public-api.wordpress.com/wp-admin/rest-proxy/
Resource Blocked Low robots.txt”
Here’s a screenshot: https://gildedastrology.files.wordpress.com/2017/06/screenshot_2017-06-09-23-19-32-1.png
It appears something with WordPress.com is keeping Google from fully fetching and rendering my site? What do I need to do to fix this?
Thanks much!
The blog I need help with is: (visible only to logged in users)
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When you make a site private and Google’s spiders attempt to access it the result is that search result that you posted above.
A description for this result is not available because of this site’s robots.txt
We cannot assist with any Google or other search engine issues. After the site is made public publishing new content will drive that result down in the SERPs (search engine page results).
Publish frequently to bump your new site content above the old site indexed content. Ask Google to recrawl your new site URLs. https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/6065812?hl=en
re: search engine discoverability
It can take weeks for search engines to index your site content. Please read this support doc https://en.support.wordpress.com/search-engines/ so you know we have no control over search engines positioning or appearance in the SERPs (search engine page results).
To verify blog ownership of a WordPress.com hosted blog with the major search engines you must use this process > http://en.support.wordpress.com/webmaster-tools/
Note: Even if you do not verify the blog the content will be indexed by search engines so don’t feel panicky about this please.WordPress.com automatically supplies sitemaps for our blogs to search engines – we do nothing. http://en.support.wordpress.com/sitemaps/#xml-sitemaps-for-search-engines
Search engines aren’t attracted to sites that are page based. Sites that are post based where publication of posts, not pages is frequent are more attractive to them. To gain search engine attention, I recommend that you start publishing posts (not pages) https://en.support.wordpress.com/post-vs-page/ frequently.That’s because it can take weeks for search engines to index content in a new blog and/or to re-index content under a new URL.
WordPress.COM SEO resources that you will want to consult are:
https://en.support.wordpress.com/search-engines/
https://en.support.wordpress.com/webmaster-tools/
http://en.blog.wordpress.com/2013/03/22/seo-on-wordpress-com/
https://dailypost.wordpress.com/2016/03/10/six-seo-factors-you-should-know/
http://en.support.wordpress.com/getting-more-views-and-traffic/
https://dailypost.wordpress.com/postaday/ebook-grow-traffic/Also, note that posts do not display in the Reader forever. Posts only display in the WordPress.COM Reader for 60 days.
It’s important that you read this support doc closely http://en.support.wordpress.com/topics/#missing-posts
The rule of thumb is to assign to your posts the least, not the most, combined number of only relevant categories and tags that accurately describe the individual post content. And, you never assign the same keyword or keyword phrase as both a category and a tag. -
None of those scripts are actually needed to render your site.
Blocking them has no effect – it would render the same with or without them.
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