
- #HOW TO SEARCH A WEB PAGE FOR SPECIFIC WORDS HOW TO#
- #HOW TO SEARCH A WEB PAGE FOR SPECIFIC WORDS PRO#
If ticked, Sitebulb will match on a string like 'Ski Goggles' or 'SKI goggles.' Unticked, it would not match on either of these examples, only on the lowercase 'ski goggles.'
Ignore case - Pretty self-explanatory. It uses a phrase match, so the example above will match on a string like 'best ski goggles' but not on a string like 'best ski or snowboard goggles'. Word or text to Find - This is the phrase that Sitebulb will search for when crawling each URL, or page, on your website. Let's dig into what each option means in more detail: The image below shows the default setup, with an example search phrase: However, there are some additional settings we have yet to explore. The process outlined above is suitable for most simple use-cases of content search. That is the basic setup, and this simple process will allow you to easily set up content searches and view the data in your results. You can also create filters on the data to gain additional insights. We can quickly sort this data by clicking the column heading for any search phrase we want to sort by.Īs always with URL Lists, you can add or remove columns so that you can easily combine technical crawl data with your extracted data. The numbers in each cell relate to how many instances of the phrase were found on each page. To see the detail of specific URLs, we need to switch to the URLs tab, which shows the URLs alongside columns headed by the text/phrase filters. Without even analysing the data in detail we can already see that 'crawler' is dominant. Found on URLs = the number of unique URLs that Sitebulb found the phrase on. Total Found = the total number of instances that Sitebulb found the phrase, even if some of them were on the same page. The two data columns tell you slightly different things: The Overview will show you details of the data totals for each different search phrase: Once your audit is complete, you can access the data report using the left hand menu. Once you're done adding rules and any other audit setup configurations, hit Start Now at the bottom right of the screen, to start the audit. #HOW TO SEARCH A WEB PAGE FOR SPECIFIC WORDS PRO#
With a Sitebulb Pro license, there is no limit to the number of rules you can add, so collect all the data you need (with a Lite license there is a limit of 3 rules). You will see all your rules in the audit setup page, ready for you to start the audit.įor example, if we wanted to crawl our site and understand how often we reference Sitebulb as a 'crawler' vs a 'website auditor', we could set it up like this: Once you've added your rule, you can stop there, or just keep adding more rules. You're now all set to search your website for this word, whatever it may be.
For a basic search, all you need to do is enter the text and hit 'Add Rule', and that's all there is to it. This will open up the on-screen rule wizard. To get started, simply start a new audit, and from the setup options, scroll down to Extraction, and click to open up the Content Search option. You can jump to a specific area of the guide using the jumplinks below:Īdding content search to your website audit This guide covers the entire process for setting up content search within Sitebulb, including all the advanced settings.
Understand which pages mention certain target keywords (for building internal links). Check which pages reference a particular brand name or company name. Check if ecommerce product pages contain 'out of stock' messaging.
This allows you to then filter pages based on whether or not they contain certain words. Sitebulb has a feature called 'Content Search', which allows you to configure the crawler to search a website for a specific word or phrase on every page that it crawls.
#HOW TO SEARCH A WEB PAGE FOR SPECIFIC WORDS HOW TO#
This guide gives a step-by-step walkthrough on how to search a website for a word, phrase, or string of text, and find every page which it appears on.