Viewing 10 replies - 1 through 10 (of 10 total)
  • leon2107

    (@leon2107)

    At least wait a week to see some results, two days is too short.

    neotrope

    (@neotrope)

    Couple of little tricks

    a) make sure you test your AMP posts with Google’s validation tool
    b) force resubmit of your sitemap(s) in your search console

    They will eventually ‘sense’ the AMP-ready content, and also put up a notice for your domain in search console about “optimizing your AMP content”

    Thread Starter rockybatleboa

    (@rockybatleboa)

    Many thanks I’m going to give a try to all this and tell you in a couple of weeks what happened!

    Hi, I’m currently experiencing the same issue. Once I try the AMP version it’s seems to work fine, but the code isn’t discovered by the spider. I’ve read on previous post that takes time but even when I use the validation tool the code isn’t recognised at all…
    For example

    This should be the AMP version of this page

    No AMP code is actually seen by the Google AMP tool. Any suggestion?

    You can test any AMP enabled page with Google’s AMP testing tool. It will tell you if the /amp/ version on your site validates or has errors. That should always be first step.

    It will specify the errors, typically.

    However, it does seem they are rolling out the system based on country/language — obviously, U.S., first, then other countries/languages.

    Not sure if they have any kind of “rollout status” anywhere that would show that. It’s Google — so they might have a forum about it someplace you could look for.

    @ neotrope I’ve already checked a random page with the google’s AMP testing tool, but it cannot find any AMP code! that’s why I’m following up this discussion!

    @lucagianneschi

    maybe try disabling the “minification” you’re using with your CDN / caching ?

    Thread Starter rockybatleboa

    (@rockybatleboa)

    Hi,

    Try to resubmit the sitemaps in your search console that worked for me!

    Regards

    Hi
    lucagianneschi

    note
    if you have the rel amp tag in your canonical posts, then site is amp ready, if the endpoint leads to an /amp/ CSS-driven version

    if you test the /amp/ version with Google’s testing tool in Chrome per their docs with the developer addition, and get no errors then that is first step.

    Resubmit your sitemap as I suggested earlier, as this causes Google to rescan ALL your posts, and see the rel tag for amp availability.

    THEN once they start “scanning” your posts, they will generate errors in your search console to review.

    Thanks for the suggestion. I resubmitted my sitemap a couple of days ago. Today 29 AMP pages with no error are found by Google. So you did the trick. Thanks so much.

Viewing 10 replies - 1 through 10 (of 10 total)
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