The SEO Manager provides several indicators of website search health. Here's what they mean and when to take action.
The sitemap is being processed correctly by Google with no critical issues. This is the ideal state. No immediate action needed, but continue monitoring monthly.
Google processed the sitemap but found minor issues. These won't prevent indexing but should be addressed when time allows. Common warnings include:
Review the specific warnings and decide which to address based on the pages involved.
Critical issues are preventing Google from processing the sitemap correctly. Address these as soon as possible:
Check the error details and work with a web developer if needed to resolve technical issues.
The page is successfully indexed and can appear in search results. This is the goal for all important content. No action needed.
Google found the page but hasn't indexed it yet. This is common for:
If important pages stay in "Discovered" status for more than a month, consider improving their content quality, adding internal links, or promoting them to signal their importance.
Google deliberately chose not to index this page. Common reasons:
Similar to another page on your site. Consider consolidating or using canonical tags.
Thin content with little value. Expand the content or consider removing the page.
Has a canonical tag pointing elsewhere. Verify this is intentional.
Intentionally excluded. Remove the tag if this is a mistake.
Problems preventing indexing that require immediate attention:
The robots.txt file blocks access. Update the file if this is unintentional.
The server is returning errors. Check with the hosting provider.
The page doesn't exist. Either create the page or remove it from the sitemap.
Page returns a 404 error but without the proper status code. Fix the server configuration.
The sitemap includes hints to Google about page importance:
These are suggestions to Google, not commands. Google uses many factors beyond priority to determine crawling and ranking.
Indicates how often the page is updated:
Set realistic frequencies. Marking everything as "daily" when updates happen monthly can reduce trust with Google.
The sitemap content should reflect the actual website:
Mostly web pages: Normal for therapy practice websites. Most content is text-based service pages and blog posts.
Some images: If images are included in the sitemap, make sure they're high-quality and properly optimized with alt text.
Few or no videos: Normal unless video content is actively created. Don't worry if this is zero.
Zero news items: Expected for practice websites. This is primarily for news publications.
Set a reminder to review the SEO Manager once a month:
This 10-15 minute monthly check catches most issues before they impact search visibility.
Prioritize important pages: Focus on inspecting the homepage, main service pages, and cornerstone blog posts rather than every page on the site.
Check after publishing: Inspect new content 2-3 days after publishing to verify Google has discovered it.
Investigate errors immediately: Red error badges indicate real problems. Click through to understand and fix the issue.
Monitor mobile usability: Most visitors find therapists on mobile devices. Pay attention to mobile usability warnings.
Don't panic about "Discovered": It's normal for Google to discover pages before indexing them. Give it a week or two unless it's a critical page.
Check regularly: Review sitemaps monthly to catch issues before they impact visibility.
Act on errors quickly: Red error badges indicate problems that prevent Google from indexing content. Address these as soon as possible.
Don't over-resubmit: Resubmitting the same sitemap multiple times won't speed up indexing. Once every few weeks after major updates is sufficient.
Keep sitemaps current: Ensure the sitemap automatically updates when new content is published. Most website platforms handle this automatically.
Monitor after launches: After launching new service pages or blog content, check that they appear in the sitemap and resubmit if needed.