How Google Search Engine Works
Google gets information from many different sources, including: Web pages User-submitted content such as your Business Profile and Google Maps user submissions Book scanning Public databases on the internet Many other source However, this page focuses on web pages. Google follows three basic steps to generate results from web pages: Crawling Indexing Serving (and ranking) The first step is finding out what pages exist on the web. There isn't a central registry of all web pages, so Google must constantly search for new pages and add them to its list of known pages. Some pages are known because Google has already visited them before. Other pages are discovered when Google follows a link from a known page to a new page. Still other pages are discovered when a website owner submits a list of pages (a sitemap ) for Google to crawl. If you're using a managed web host, such as Wix or Blogger, they might tell Google to crawl any updated or new pages that you make.
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