Crawl Budget and the Crawl Stats report – Google Search Console Training



Daniel Waisberg comes back for a special episode of Google Search Console Training. He provides a short introduction to how Google crawls pages, and defines terms such as crawl rate, crawl demand, and crawl budget. Then he dives into the new Crawl Stats report in Search Console which provides data on crawl requests, average response time, and more.

Search Console Crawl Stats report → http://goo.gle/3aLcUOa
What Crawl Budget Means for Googlebot → http://goo.gle/3shjGAR
Change crawl rate limit using Search Console → http://goo.gle/3sdjhiQ
How crawling works → http://goo.gle/3uo22NN
Watch more Search Console Training videos → https://goo.gle/sct

Share your feedback on Twitter → https://twitter.com/googlesearchc
Subscribe to the Webmasters Channel → https://goo.gle/searchcentral

#SearchConsole #seo #GoogleSearch

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32 thoughts on “Crawl Budget and the Crawl Stats report – Google Search Console Training”

  1. Hi sir🙂🤔🤔🤔
    You tell very well but you tell with practical, which will make us understand better, I hope you have understood what I want to say.

  2. nice to meet.
    This is Park Joong-ho working for a news newspaper.
    I have one question.
    Since last month, AMP has been applied to our company's site.
    According to the Google Search Console, our site has 200,000 article pages indexed.
    Then, when you applied the AMP page from the last step
    How do you AMP INDEXING of the last 200,000 articles?
    If there is a way, please tell me..
    Thank you very much for your YouTube content.

  3. If in the html it is binary hex (like example 0x001), why can't it be read by the google server console? while the google console performs binary searches. utf-8, utf-16 and utf-32.

    Because I want to try experimenting with Google console and Microsoft clarity (can you read html content with hex binaries).

    Thank you for the information that you provided by Google to us 🙂

  4. Why is the Crawl Stats report hidden in the settings section of Search Console? Seems like it would make way more sense to include it on the left-hand navigation in the Performance or Index area.

  5. As web developers, when we build or upgrade a website, we always aim to ensure that SEO techniques are hard-wired into the website architecture. This includes utilising the information provided by search console.

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