Wrong Indexing of site elements

#126953
  • Resolved Nitesh Kunnath
    Rank Math free

    Hello,

    After shifting to RankMath from Yoast, I am having weird issues of Google search results showing weird codes instead of normal text content.

    Please see this screenshot for more info. Screenshot

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • Hello,

    Thank you for contacting Rank Math and bringing your concern to our attention. I’m sorry for any inconvenience this issue may have caused you.

    1. First of all, assuming that you have already changed the SEO Meta Title and Meta Description with the help of Rank Math:
    Add a Meta Description in Classic Editor:
    meta in classic

    Add title and description in Gutenberg:
    meta in gutenberg

    2. Then, ensure that this is the setting in the Schema tab if the Schema Markup module is enabled on your website:
    schema values

    To reiterate, the Schema title must show %seo_title%, and the description should show %seo_description% – this will ensure your SEO title and SEO Description that you set up via Rank Math can also be used for your Schema details.

    3. The next step is to check if your title/description is properly set up in the page source:
    https://i.rankmath.com/HwXR1o

    You can use this tool for the same as well: https://www.heymeta.com/

    4. If it matches your settings, then you must check if Google has seen the changes already or not.

    For that, please check when the Google cache was updated for that page:
    a. cache
    b. cached

    If the cache date is from before adding the new meta description, you have to wait for Google to re-crawl and re-index the page with the new info. If the date is after you made the changes, you have to wait it out, and there is no further input needed from your end.

    Do note that if everything’s fine and Google still decides to show a different meta title/description for your search keyword, there is nothing you can do as Google sometimes ignores the custom meta info altogether and show something from the page’s content that matches the search intent better.

    Here are some of the common reasons Google might not use the meta description you provided:
    The meta description is not relevant or useful (ie, just a collection of keywords).
    The exact same meta description is provided across a large number of pages.
    The meta description doesn’t match what the user is searching for, but other content on the page does.

    There is a whole article dedicated to this on SearchEngineJournal:
    https://www.searchenginejournal.com/google-offers-suggestions-for-avoiding-meta-description-rewrites/359884/

    Here is an example showing Google changes title depending on the keyword used:
    description
    &
    description 2

    The best you can do is optimize your meta tags to try and match the intent of the search/keyword.

    I hope that helps. Thank you, and please don’t hesitate to contact us if you need further assistance.

    Absolutely not the answer I am looking forward for. This is related to some inline CSS which google bots are reading as text. Any information on this?
    If you google search this “__CONFIG_colors_palette__” you will find many results for this? Why is this happening? Any specific idea on this particular issue?

    Hello,

    Thank you for the follow up.

    If you check your site URL, you related search results appear perfectly fine, here is a screenshot from my end: https://i.rankmath.com/MNE9j8

    When you do a search on __CONFIG_colors_palette__, this is resulting to a lot of related data, none of which seems to be on your site:
    img

    __CONFIG_colors_palette__ is a CSS object used to define colors in CSS objects. Searching for this may lead to a lot of unspecified results, a mixture of sites using this feature and other sites trying to explain uses of the feature. If your site appears in this search, it is likely in either of the two categories.

    That said, you should optimize your site data and meta to ensure they are targeting the related and intended search keyword.

    Hope this helps you. Thank you.

    __CONFIG_colors_palette__ is a CSS object used to define colors in CSS objects. Searching for this may lead to a lot of unspecified results, a mixture of sites using this feature and other sites trying to explain uses of the feature. If your site appears in this search, it is likely in either of the two categories.

    yes, I agree that the site is using this mentioned CSS object. How can we hide these CSS codes from search engines so that it doesn’t display results for any site codes.

    Hi,

    If the CSS definitions exist within the site pages, the first thing would be to use a minification plugin or manually move the CSS to an external file after which you can use your robots.txt to disallow search engines from crawling the css files.

    Hope this helps you. Thank you.

    Hello,

    Since we did not hear back from you for 15 days, we are assuming that you found the solution. We are closing this support ticket.

    If you still need assistance or any other help, please feel free to open a new support ticket, and we will be more than happy to assist.

    Thank you.

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)

The ticket ‘Wrong Indexing of site elements’ is closed to new replies.