Instant SEO Results 👀 Index AI Content in 2 Minutes ⭐ (7 Methods)

Caleb Ulku 7:13
Transcript
0:00
0:00 Now, have you ever felt like you're waiting just forever for Google to index your new content?
0:04 This could especially be a problem if you're publishing a lot of content on a regular basis,
0:08 which you should absolutely be doing, especially with AI's health.
0:12 I'm going to break down seven hacks that will let you get your AI-generated content to index in minutes.
0:18 So first, internal links.
0:20 You want to make sure that any new article that you publish has links from other pages on your website.
0:26 A really good way to decide which pages should link to your new ones, first of all, they have to be relevant.
0:33 And second, we can use Google Search Console data to decide which internal pages are most powerful in Google's eyes.
0:40 So I'm going to show you what that looks like over here.
0:44 So here I am inside Google Search Console.
0:46 And all I'm going to do is look for the most powerful pages.
0:50 So I'll come down to performance.
0:53 And I'll click pages here.
0:56 And I want to sort actually by impressions.
0:58 So the reason for this is if a page is getting a lot of impressions, that shows that Google
1:03 trusts that page a lot.
1:05 So pages with lots of impressions are pages that should have internal links to your new
1:11 pages.
1:11 If you publish new content about a topic similar to one of these, then you should link from
1:17 here to your new content.
1:19 Linking from pages that have a high number of impressions to your brand new GIF Fathers
1:23 pages a really good way to get it indexed quickly.
1:26 All right, number two, use structured data.
1:29 Use every type of skewab that is relevant for that particular page.
1:34 But you just can't have more than one type of schema.
1:37 Almost every page of your website should at least have organization schema and
1:41 breadcrumb schema.
1:42 There also artist schema review schema local business schema Use every type of schema that relevant to the content relative to the page that you published Okay Structured data will help indexing Number
1:54 three, make sure the content is well-built, is well-designed. You want to make sure you're using
2:00 H1, H2, H3 text. You want to use images. You want to use tables. You want to use callouts.
2:06 Especially in this age of AI-generated content, I've seen website after website that are 2,000
2:12 word blocks of text with no images, no htank, milk tables, just a jury block of text and that is just
2:20 not going to cut it. Google will not index a 2000 word block of text, not anymore. It's just much,
2:28 much more difficult. Get, spend the effort to make sure that the new page is actually well built,
2:34 well formed. Alright, number four, add a sitemap with the last modified ding and you're going to
2:39 submit that sitemap to the Search Console.
2:42 Don't rely available to just find it.
2:44 And generally it will, but we can just add it very easily.
2:48 And I'll show you exactly how.
2:50 So here I am again in Search Console.
2:52 And we're going to go down to Sitemaps.
2:54 And we have these sitemaps.
2:56 And we can add a new sitemap if we wanted to right here
2:59 with this URL.
3:00 So super easy to add a sitemap.
3:01 And that's going to help give Google an idea of which pages
3:05 you want it to crawl.
3:07 Now, if you have a very small site,
3:09 you with that 50 URLs, you probably don't need a sitemap.
3:12 But if you are struggling with indexing, it's something that takes five minutes to do,
3:17 go ahead and knock it out.
3:18 It will help.
3:19 Number five, social media links.
3:21 Okay, so this is one where if Google sees your new page being shared on social media,
3:27 Facebook Twitter even a GBP post with a link to your new content Google is going to be more likely to actually index that I mean keep in mind that Facebook Twitter those are some of the most powerful domains on the internet So having those links to your new content is a really good sign
3:43 that content is worth crawling and is worth indexing.
3:47 These are things that are very, very easy to do.
3:49 You can either just post it on your own Facebook or Twitter
3:52 or create a GBP post with that URL in it.
3:55 Or there are a lot of services where you can get social media type links.
3:58 The one we use is Ice Cream Chalk.
4:01 not expensive it can be drip fed and really really helps with getting an in-page index.
4:06 All right number six we're getting close to the end here number six we're just gonna ask Google
4:10 nicely to index it inside the Google search console. Let me show you exactly how to do that
4:15 it probably takes a minute. So we're going to come into search console and the first thing you have to
4:18 do is find the page and it could be any page so I'm just going to view the pages that are not indexed
4:23 and Google's going to tell us exactly why it's not indexed. I'm going to go ahead and check
4:27 crawled, currently not indexed.
4:29 What that means is Google has crawled this URL
4:31 and decided it is of no value to its searchers.
4:34 Generally, this is a pretty bad sign.
4:37 So we're going to come in here and it doesn't matter.
4:40 We'll just pick one of these and we'll click Inspect URL.
4:46 And Google is saying, hey, it's not an index.
4:48 And if it's not indexed, it can't be served on Google.
4:51 We can look at it here to see why.
4:53 And all you have to do is click Request Indexing.
4:56 Now this might take another minute or so.
4:58 What Google is doing now,
4:59 it's just basically recrawling that URL
5:02 to see if anything has changed,
5:04 to make sure there's no index tag,
5:06 to make sure that the URL is capable of being indexed,
5:09 to make sure that there's no for or for error
5:11 or redirect, anything like that.
5:15 All right, and we saw I just said submitting requests
5:16 and now indexing requested.
5:18 Now generally this only takes a few minutes So I done this test before on multiple types If we do a quick search on Google in by 10 minutes we probably see this URL indexed
5:29 Now, I might not stay indexed if Google doesn't
5:32 like to call it a URL, but this is a really good way
5:34 just to quickly get it indexed and then relying
5:37 on the fact that it is a quality URL, quality content,
5:40 that actually provides valuable information,
5:42 actually helps Google's users, Google searchers.
5:45 If that's the case, then it will stick around.
5:47 If not, if it's a low quality AI written dribble,
5:50 it'll probably get indexed and then de-indexed within a few hours later.
5:55 All right.
5:55 And number seven, the last hack.
5:57 If you tried the other six and they're just not working,
6:00 you just can't get to make index.
6:01 You submitted it on Google and it's not working.
6:04 And you know the quality is good, right?
6:06 It's not just AI generated.
6:08 You had your human editor tune it up, improve it,
6:10 and it's still not getting indexed.
6:12 That is when my agency were going to use a third-party indexing tool,
6:16 one like indexmedow.com. This is what that tool looks like. It's not free as most tools aren't,
6:23 but it's pretty easy to use. You're just going to give it the URL that you want indexed and then it
6:28 will work and index it. If it fails, then it doesn't charge you. So using those seven hacks,
6:34 you should be able to get your content indexed very, very quickly, very easily. There are a lot
6:39 of big websites out there, major websites like cnn.com that actually are struggling with indexing.
6:45 And if your content is an index, then you may as well have not produced it.
6:50 You're just wasting your time.
6:51 So indexing is critically important.
6:53 Those seven tags will make sure that you're going to be able to get your content indexed in 10 minutes or less.
6:59 Now that you know how to get your new content indexed, I want you to learn how to improve your existing content using AI.
7:06 In just five minutes, you're going to be able to make massive rate improvements with the methods in this video.

Caleb Ulku presents seven actionable methods to get AI-generated content indexed by Google quickly, often within minutes. The methods range from on-page optimizations (internal links from high-impression pages, structured data/schema markup, well-formatted content with headers and images) to technical steps (submitting sitemaps in Search Console, requesting indexing directly via URL inspection) to off-page signals (social media sharing on high-authority domains like Facebook/Twitter or Google Business Profile posts). As a last resort, he recommends a paid third-party indexing tool called indexmenow.com. He emphasizes that unindexed content is wasted effort, and that low-quality AI-generated text blocks will be indexed briefly then de-indexed.

Accelerating Google Indexing of AI-Generated Content Google Search Console Utilization Content Quality as an Indexing Factor Technical SEO Best Practices
  • Link new pages from your highest-impression pages in Google Search Console — these are the pages Google trusts most and will pass crawl priority to new content.
  • Use structured data (schema markup) on every page, including at minimum Organization and Breadcrumb schema, plus any other relevant types — this aids indexing and content understanding.
  • Avoid publishing plain blocks of AI text; format content with H1/H2/H3 headings, images, tables, and callouts, or Google is unlikely to index or retain it.
  • Use the 'Request Indexing' feature in Google Search Console's URL Inspection tool to trigger a recrawl within minutes for any specific URL.
  • If all else fails, use a paid third-party indexing service like indexmenow.com, which only charges for successful indexing.
Q&A 15
What are the 7 hacks to get AI-generated content indexed by Google quickly?

The 7 hacks to get AI-generated content indexed by Google quickly are: 1) Use internal links from high-impression pages to your new content, 2) Use structured data/schema markup relevant to your page, 3) Make sure content is well-built with proper formatting (H1/H2/H3, images, tables, callouts), 4) Add a sitemap with last-modified dates and submit it to Google Search Console, 5) Share your content on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or via a Google Business Profile post, 6) Manually request indexing through Google Search Console, and 7) Use a third-party indexing tool like indexmenow.com if all else fails.

How do you use Google Search Console to find the best pages to add internal links from?

In Google Search Console, go to the Performance section and click on 'Pages,' then sort by Impressions. Pages with a high number of impressions are pages that Google trusts the most. You should add internal links from these high-impression pages to your new content, provided the topics are relevant. Linking from trusted, high-impression pages to new pages is one of the most effective ways to get new content indexed quickly.

Why is structured data important for getting content indexed faster?

Structured data (schema markup) helps Google better understand your content, which aids in the indexing process. You should use every type of schema that is relevant to the particular page. Almost every page should at minimum have Organization schema and Breadcrumb schema. Other types include Article schema, Review schema, and Local Business schema. Note that you cannot use more than one type of schema per page, so choose the most relevant ones.

What content formatting elements does Google expect to see before it will index a page?

Google expects well-structured, well-designed content that includes proper heading tags (H1, H2, H3), images, tables, and callouts. A plain block of 2,000+ words with no images, no heading tags, and no tables is very unlikely to get indexed by Google anymore. Simply publishing a raw block of AI-generated text without formatting is not sufficient — you need to invest effort in making the page visually structured and readable.

How do you submit a sitemap to Google Search Console?

In Google Search Console, navigate to the 'Sitemaps' section in the left menu. From there, you can add a new sitemap by entering your sitemap URL in the provided field. The process takes about five minutes. It's especially recommended if you're struggling with indexing, even though Google can usually find sitemaps on its own. Make sure your sitemap includes 'last modified' dates so Google knows which pages have been recently updated.

Do small websites need to submit a sitemap to Google Search Console?

If your website has fewer than 50 URLs, you probably don't need to submit a sitemap, as Google will generally find your pages on its own. However, if you are struggling with indexing issues, submitting a sitemap takes only about five minutes and can help, so it's worth doing regardless of site size.

How can social media help get new content indexed by Google faster?

When Google sees your new page being shared on social media platforms like Facebook or Twitter, it signals that the content is worth crawling and indexing. Since Facebook and Twitter are among the most powerful domains on the internet, having links from those platforms pointing to your new content is a strong positive signal. You can post links on your own social media accounts, create a Google Business Profile (GBP) post with the URL, or use third-party services that provide social media-type links. One service mentioned is Ice Cream Chalk, which is affordable and can drip-feed links.

How do you manually request indexing for a specific URL in Google Search Console?

In Google Search Console, use the URL Inspection tool by entering the specific URL you want indexed. If the URL is not indexed, you'll see a 'Request Indexing' button — click it. Google will then recrawl the URL to check for any issues such as no-index tags, 404 errors, or redirects. This process typically takes only a few minutes, and the URL can appear in Google's index within about 10 minutes. Note that if the content is low quality, it may get indexed briefly but then de-indexed within a few hours.

What does it mean when Google Search Console shows a page as 'Crawled - Currently Not Indexed'?

When Google Search Console shows a page as 'Crawled - Currently Not Indexed,' it means Google has already visited (crawled) that URL but determined it has no value for its searchers and therefore chose not to include it in the search index. This is generally considered a bad sign and typically indicates a content quality issue. If your content is not indexed, it cannot appear in Google search results, making all your content creation effort wasted.

When should you use a third-party indexing tool like indexmenow.com?

You should use a third-party indexing tool like indexmenow.com as a last resort — hack #7 — when you've already tried all other six methods (internal links, structured data, good content formatting, sitemap submission, social media links, and manual indexing request in Search Console) and the page still isn't getting indexed. This tool is particularly appropriate when you know the content quality is good (e.g., it has been reviewed and improved by a human editor) but it's still not being indexed. The tool only charges you if it successfully indexes the URL.

Why is content indexing so important for SEO?

If your content is not indexed by Google, it cannot appear in search results, which means it effectively does not exist for searchers. All the time and resources spent creating that content are completely wasted if it never gets indexed. Even large, authoritative websites like CNN can struggle with indexing issues. Indexing is therefore a critical first step — without it, no amount of content quality or SEO optimization will drive organic traffic.

What is the risk of publishing low-quality AI-generated content in terms of indexing?

Low-quality AI-generated content — described as 'AI written dribble' — may get indexed initially when you request it, but Google will likely de-index it within a few hours once it determines the content provides no value to searchers. For content to remain indexed long-term, it must be genuinely useful, provide valuable information, and actually help Google's users. Simply generating bulk AI text without human editing or quality improvement is unlikely to achieve lasting indexing.

What types of schema markup should every website page include?

Almost every page on your website should at minimum include Organization schema and Breadcrumb schema. Beyond that, you should add any additional schema types that are relevant to the specific page's content, such as Article schema, Review schema, or Local Business schema. The key rule is to use every relevant schema type for the page, but you cannot use more than one type of the same schema. Using appropriate structured data helps with indexing and helps Google understand your content better.

How quickly can a URL get indexed after requesting indexing in Google Search Console?

After clicking 'Request Indexing' in Google Search Console, the URL can typically appear in Google's index within about 10 minutes. Google uses this process to recrawl the URL and verify there are no technical issues preventing indexing (such as no-index tags, 404 errors, or redirects). However, while it may get indexed quickly, it will only stay indexed if the content is of sufficient quality and value to Google's users.

What criteria should you use when choosing which existing pages to link from to a new article?

When choosing which existing pages to link from to a new article, you should apply two criteria: First, the existing page must be topically relevant to the new content. Second, you should prioritize pages that have the highest number of impressions in Google Search Console, as high impressions indicate that Google trusts those pages. Combining relevance with authority (measured by impressions) gives your new content the best chance of being discovered and indexed quickly.