ChatGPT is a chatbot launched by OpenAI research company in November 2022 and is built on top of OpenAI's GPT-3 family.
Explore OpenAI ChatGPT tool for any of your questions and get instant intelligent answers.
Chat GPT for SEO produces well-written Contents, Essays, Articles, Blog Posts virtually on any topic as well as can use it for writing informative Product Descriptions and Page Titles.
Completed SEO Certification Course from HubSpot Academy and now, I'm SEO Certified professional with below Curriculum completed:
https://app.hubspot.com/academy/achievements/6ppfr2wm/en/1/y-d-sirish-kumar/seo
With Regards
Datta Sirish Kumar
Force an exact-match search. Use this to refine results for ambiguous searches, or to exclude synonyms when searching for single words.
Example: “steve jobs”
Search for X or Y. This will return results related to X or Y, or both. Note: The pipe (|) operator can also be used in place of “OR.”
Examples: jobs OR gates / jobs | gates
Search for X and Y. This will return only results related to both X and Y. Note: It doesn’t really make much difference for regular searches, as Google defaults to “AND” anyway. But it’s very useful when paired with other operators.
Example: jobs AND gates
Exclude a term or phrase. In our example, any pages returned will be related to jobs but not Apple (the company).
Example: jobs -apple
Acts as a wildcard and will match any word or phrase.
Example: steve * apple
Group multiple terms or search operators to control how the search is executed.
Example: (ipad OR iphone) apple
Search for prices. Also works for Euro (€), but not GBP (£) 🙁
Example: ipad $329
A dictionary built into Google, basically. This will display the meaning of a word in a card-like result in the SERPs.
Example: define:entrepreneur
Returns the most recent cached version of a web page (providing the page is indexed, of course).
Example: cache:apple.com
Restrict results to those of a certain filetype. E.g., PDF, DOCX, TXT, PPT, etc. Note: The “ext:” operator can also be used—the results are identical.
Example: apple filetype:pdf / apple ext:pdf
Limit results to those from a specific website.
Example: site:apple.com
Find sites related to a given domain.
Example: related:apple.com
Find pages with a certain word (or words) in the title. In our example, any results containing the word “apple” in the title tag will be returned.
Example: intitle:apple
Similar to “intitle,” but only results containing all of the specified words in the title tag will be returned.
Example: allintitle:apple iphone
Find pages with a certain word (or words) in the URL. For this example, any results containing the word “apple” in the URL will be returned.
Example: inurl:apple
Similar to “inurl,” but only results containing all of the specified words in the URL will be returned.
Example: allinurl:apple iphone
Find pages containing a certain word (or words) somewhere in the content. For this example, any results containing the word “apple” in the page content will be returned.
Example: intext:apple
Similar to “intext,” but only results containing all of the specified words somewhere on the page will be returned.
Example: allintext:apple iphone
Proximity search. Find pages containing two words or phrases within X words of each other. For this example, the words “apple” and “iphone” must be present in the content and no further than four words apart.
Example: apple AROUND(4) iphone
Find the weather for a specific location. This is displayed in a weather snippet, but it also returns results from other “weather” websites.
Example: weather:san francisco
See stock information (i.e., price, etc.) for a specific ticker.
Example: stocks:aapl
Force Google to show map results for a locational search.
Example: map:silicon valley
Find information about a specific movie. Also finds movie showtimes if the movie is currently showing near you.
Example: movie:steve jobs
Convert one unit to another. Works with currencies, weights, temperatures, etc.
Example: $329 in GBP
Find news results from a certain source in Google News.
Example: apple source:the_verge
Not exactly a search operator, but acts as a wildcard for Google Autocomplete.
Example: apple CEO _ jobs
Here are the ones that are hit and miss testing:
Search for a range of numbers. In the example below, searches related to “WWDC videos” are returned for the years 2010-2014, but not for 2015 and beyond.
Example: wwdc video 2010..2014
Find pages that are being linked to with specific anchor text. For this example, any results with inbound links containing either “apple” or “iphone” in the anchor text will be returned.
Example: inanchor:apple iphone
Similar to “inanchor,” but only results containing all of the specified words in the inbound anchor text will be returned.
Example: allinanchor:apple iphone
Find blog URLs under a specific domain. This was used in Google blog search, but I’ve found it does return some results in regular search.
Example: blogurl:microsoft.com
Find results from a given area.
Example: loc:”san francisco” apple
Find news from a certain location in Google News.
Example: loc:”san francisco” apple
Here are the Google search operators that have been discontinued and no longer work. 🙁
Force an exact-match search on a single word or phrase.
Example: jobs +apple
Include synonyms. Doesn’t work, because Google now includes synonyms by default. (Hint: Use double quotes to exclude synonyms.)
Example: ~apple
Find blog posts written by a specific author. This only worked in Google Blog search, not regular Google search.
Example: inpostauthor:”steve jobs”
Similar to “inpostauthor,” but removes the need for quotes (if you want to search for a specific author, including surname.)
Example: allinpostauthor:steve jobs
Find blog posts with specific words in the title. No longer works, as this operator was unique to the discontinued Google blog search.
Example: intitle:apple iphone
Find pages linking to a specific domain or URL. Google killed this operator in 2017, but it does still show some results—they likely aren’t particularly accurate though. (Deprecated in 2017)
Example: link:apple.com
Find information about a specific page, including the most recent cache, similar pages, etc. (Deprecated in 2017). Note: The id:
operator can also be used—the results are identical.
Example: info:apple.com / id:apple.com
Find results from a certain date range. Uses the Julian date format, for some reason.
Example: daterange:11278-13278
Find someone’s phone number. (Deprecated in 2010)
Example: phonebook:tim cook
Searches #hashtags. Introduced for Google+; now deprecated.
Example: #apple
Source: ahrefs.com
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Types of Search Intent |
happy re-searching..!
It seems Google officially declared that they have dropped the public submission feature called Submit URL to Google, but webmasters or site owners can still submit their individual page url’s Google Search Console tool.
Log into Google Search Console.
Select your website from the list you have.
On LHS navigation, click on Crawl & goto Fetch as Google option.
Now submit/paste the url that you want Google for indexing in the text box & click FETCH AND RENDER.
We’ve had to drop the public submission feature, but we continue to welcome your submissions using the usual tool in Search Console and through sitemaps directly.
— Google Webmasters (@googlewmc) July 25, 2018
Here is the new advanced schema markup for products called GS1 SmartSearch [an extension of schema.org to support richer product data descriptions], helping organic search listings gain more visibility in search results and JSON-LD is the recommended format for GS1 SmartSearch.
https://www.gs1.org/1/smart-search-demo/
https://search.google.com/structured-data/testing-tool/
Page speed is actually described in either “page load time” (the time taken for a page to fully display the content) or “time to first byte” (how long it takes for your browser to receive the first byte of information from the web server).
Use Google PageSpeed Insights tools as it reports two important speed metrics:
Here are some of the ways to increase your page speed:
Google PageSpeed Insights: https://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/insights/
PageSpeed Insights tool analyzes the content of a web page and then generates suggestions to make that page faster.
Google’s #webdev tool offers SEO score to measure from 0 to 100. Check how useful is it at https://web.dev/measure .
Google says, making your content discoverable matters.
There is a lot of confusion for SEO’s when there are two title tags for a single page as mentioned below:
While optimizing the webpage title tag, it is recommended to utilize only <title> tag instead of <meta name="title"> tag as per W3C Standards.
<title> is the most important and required HTML element for a web page as per W3C Standards & Recommendations. This title will display as Browser Title or Window Title or Google Title in search results.
Google considers title tag in organic search results and is the ONLY HTML element to be considered for a page as per W3C Good Titles Tips.
Meta Title Tag <meta name="title"> is just other meta tag like meta description tag, meta robots tag, meta keywords tag, meta author tag etc that might be used or might not be by different bots or spiders.
Even Google recommends creating unique page titles with <title> tag in their official Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide.
W3C Schools – https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_meta.asp
MOZ Community – https://moz.com/community/q/title-vs-meta-name-title-both-or-just-one-of-them
Stop Google dot com redirecting to your local Google by just typing http://www.google.com/ncr in the address bar, as it is an alternative web address which helps you to stay in Google dot com without redirecting you.
NCR - stands for No Country Redirect
When you are in another country, this url http://www.google.com/ncr stops you from redirects.