AMR's natural indexing rate and percentage

6 replies
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I've been trying out the AMR's free trial and while I'm able to get 100's of successful submits, there have only been a handful of links that have actually been indexed after about three days. I guess it's probably natural to have most links not being indexed after only three days.

However, I wanted to ask if anyone knew what's the approximate naturally indexed percentage for a AMR mass distribution for successful submissions. And also how long it typically takes.

Or should I just ping all of them or something?
#amr #indexing #natural #percentage #rate
  • Profile picture of the author Joey Babbs
    I have used this service and I check my backlinks through Market Samurai, to be honest I find all the backlinking checks are different depending on what tool you use...however I have seen only about 10-20% of the actual submissions get indexed, but again I do not trust the backlink software to check it accurately so I just keep submitting articles because I know it works....
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  • Profile picture of the author junilerick
    10-20% sounds pretty low to me even if using software that supposedly doesn't show the "entire picture." I suppose it's not that big of a deal considering how fast and powerful AMR is, but it would still be nice to squeeze a little more juice out of all those article submissions.
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    • Profile picture of the author Dellco
      You have to consider that most of these article marketing tools, the articles themselves end up in the Google supplemental index after a while, so even if they are indexed, they will disappear after a while. This is what is happening to most, if not all, the article link building systems like BMR, UAW, AMR, etc.

      Google doesn't show the supplemental index anymore, but they still use it. I think one key sign is if you can find an article from some of the blogs used by these systems actually appearing in the SERPs. If you don't ever come across them, ever, then my guess is they are being shunted into the supplemental index. And stuff in the supplemental index has a high chance of getting deleted after a while.

      So you see your post indexed for now, but if it's in supplemental, it has a high chance of vanishing later.
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      • Profile picture of the author junilerick
        Originally Posted by Dellco View Post

        You have to consider that most of these article marketing tools, the articles themselves end up in the Google supplemental index after a while, so even if they are indexed, they will disappear after a while. This is what is happening to most, if not all, the article link building systems like BMR, UAW, AMR, etc.

        Google doesn't show the supplemental index anymore, but they still use it. I think one key sign is if you can find an article from some of the blogs used by these systems actually appearing in the SERPs. If you don't ever come across them, ever, then my guess is they are being shunted into the supplemental index. And stuff in the supplemental index has a high chance of getting deleted after a while.

        So you see your post indexed for now, but if it's in supplemental, it has a high chance of vanishing later.
        Don't articles only go in to the the supplemental index if it's syndicate content? Even if it is in the supplemental index, I believe the link is no less effective. But like most people, I import spintax when submitting anyway.
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        • Profile picture of the author Dellco
          Originally Posted by junilerick View Post

          Don't articles only go in to the the supplemental index if it's syndicate content? Even if it is in the supplemental index, I believe the link is no less effective. But like most people, I import spintax when submitting anyway.
          Anything that Google deems as not "high quality" but also not exactly worthy of being deindexed, that goes into the supplemental index. It's not only syndicate content. Things in the supplemental index can get deindexed and then appear back in. This kind of deindexation is not the manual kind for the main domain, where that is almost always permanent.

          For example, Goarticles has 700,000 results, but I assure you it is far more. Sometimes you'll see more than a million (that was in the past). The majority of those are in supplemental index.

          The same would apply for those blog network services, I imagine.

          Any link on a page that can remain in the Index and not go to supplemental, that kind of link is the superior one. And a link on a high traffic, and high PR page IS the best type of link.
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  • Profile picture of the author junilerick
    Any other AMR users care to chime in?
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