How to get your website on Google?
Short answer: yes, it's within your reach — provided you go about it methodically. Here's how, point by point.
TL;DR
Getting your site on Google is really two separate jobs that people tend to confuse: being known by Google (indexing), then being chosen by Google (ranking). The first can be sorted in days; the second is built with method. PageOneBoost applies this method for its clients — one-time yearly payment from €300, no monthly subscription, free audit.
What you need to understand
Check indexing before anything else : Type site:yourdomain.com into Google: if nothing comes up, your site is invisible. Submit your sitemap in Search Console and remove any blockers (a forgotten noindex tag, an over-strict robots.txt).
Structure the site around intents : One page per service, one page per important question, a clear architecture: Google ranks pages, not sites. Every page should target an identifiable query and answer it fully.
Optimise tags and content : A unique, descriptive title, properly nested headings, copy that uses your customers' own words: that's the foundation of on-page SEO. Write for humans first — the algorithm reads over their shoulder.
The method, point by point
Make the site fast and mobile-friendly : Most searches happen on phones and Google evaluates your mobile version first. Speed, readability, no intrusive elements: user experience is a ranking factor.
Grow prominence and links : Quality directories, partners, local press, your Google Business Profile: every credible mention strengthens Google's trust. It's the slowest lever — and the most durable.
- Check indexing before anything else
- Structure the site around intents
- Optimise tags and content
- Make the site fast and mobile-friendly
- Grow prominence and links
What PageOneBoost does for you
Everything above takes time, method and experience. That's exactly what PageOneBoost does: a free audit to measure your potential, then the complete foundation built — technical, content, Google Business Profile, reviews, authority — to target the first page for the long run.
Our model is simple: a one-time yearly payment, from €300, with no monthly subscription. The service covers 12 months and renews by tacit renewal. 100% white-hat method, measurable results. To talk it through: +33 1 84 80 13 42.
Frequently asked questions
My site is live: will Google find it on its own?
Probably, but sometimes slowly. Submitting your sitemap in Search Console and earning a few first links significantly speeds up the discovery and indexing of your pages.
Paid or organic search: which should you choose?
They're complementary channels: Google Ads brings immediate traffic for as long as you pay; SEO builds a lasting asset. For long-term visibility, organic is almost always the better investment.
Can I do my own SEO?
Yes, for the fundamentals: Google Business Profile, content, tags, reviews. The level above — keyword strategy, link building, advanced technical SEO — takes experience; that's where professional support makes the difference.
Where should you actually start?
With a proper assessment: indexing, current rankings, Google Business Profile, technical health. That's exactly what PageOneBoost's free audit covers — you know where you stand before investing anything.
How much does serious SEO support cost?
At PageOneBoost, it's a one-time yearly payment from €300, with no monthly subscription: the service covers 12 months and renews by tacit renewal. The initial audit is free.
Get onto the first page of Google
Free audit, one-time yearly payment from €300, no monthly subscription. PageOneBoost builds your visibility to last.
Also worth reading
- How to do an SEO competitor analysis?
- Backlinks: how does link building move a site up on Google?
- LocalBusiness schema: how to help Google place your business and climb locally?
- Service pages: why are they the structural lever for ranking on Google?
- Duplicate content: how to avoid it and keep climbing on Google?
- Long-tail keywords: why are precise queries a lever for climbing on Google?
- Voice search SEO: how to become the answer Google reads out loud
- Entities and semantic SEO: ranking on Google beyond the exact keyword