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Indexed pages growth monitoring

Screenshot of a Vercel Radar benchmark report showing indexed pages and cluster metrics for vercel.com
Vercel Radar benchmark report summarizing indexed pages and SEO cluster metrics for vercel.com.

What this page covers

Indexed pages growth monitoring

Track how your indexed pages grow over time so you can link technical SEO work to real search visibility. With a clear view of indexation trends, you can see whether new sections and clusters are actually entering search results.

Radar uses publicly available sitemap signals and a shallow crawl that respects robots rules, with a cap of up to 1,000 pages per run in the free demo. You get a fast, low-friction way to map your URL structure and spot indexation gaps, with no AI interpretation used in the demo results.

In brief

  • See whether new content is actually getting indexed and visible in search.
  • Track how many of your URLs appear in search over time so you can tell if new sections, clusters, or migrations are being picked up or left out by crawlers.
  • Connect technical SEO work to visibility trends by comparing indexation growth with search demand metrics to show leaders which initiatives move impressions, clicks, and downstream pipeline.

What to do

Radar gives growth and SEO teams a simple way to monitor indexed pages growth without adding another heavyweight crawler. The free demo uses your existing sitemaps and a shallow crawl that respects robots rules, capped at 1,000 URLs per run, so you can quickly map your structure and see which areas of the site are entering search.

Because search and revenue metrics often live in separate tools, it is hard to prove how a new cluster of pages influences meetings and pipeline. Radar is designed to plug into a broader measurement chain where indexed pages sit alongside impressions, clicks, form fills, and opportunities, so you can show which clusters justify further investment.

Instead of relying only on delayed, sampled data from search consoles, you get a structural view of your site that can be standardized across locations and segments. That makes it easier to compare clusters, spot underperforming sections, and feed insights back into content and technical work aimed at improving visibility.

What to keep in mind

The free Radar demo is intentionally lightweight: it uses publicly available sitemap signals plus a shallow crawl, with a hard cap of 1,000 pages per run and no AI interpretation. This is ideal for mapping structure and indexation patterns, but it is not a full deep crawl or log analysis tool.

Indexed pages growth is only one link in the measurement chain from search demand to pipeline. To understand business impact, you still need to connect Radar outputs with impression, click, and meeting data in your analytics and CRM stack, and to account for normal visibility fluctuations from algorithms and competitors.

Because search visibility can move daily, you should treat Radar snapshots as part of an ongoing monitoring routine rather than a one-off audit. Teams that standardize reporting across locations and segments, and regularly review which clusters gain or lose indexed coverage, get a clearer picture of where to invest.

Free SEO/GEO Radar

See how a major US website looks to Google and AI-powered search

This live Radar demo scans google.com and shows the public website as a search graph: visible pages, hubs, crawlable surface, weak spots, and entry points. For US companies, this is the first step before building a scalable search layer: demand mapping, useful Q&A pages, internal links, sitemaps, and measurable growth in impressions, clicks, and qualified inquiries.