New SEO 12 min read

Why Your Website Doesn't Show Up on Google (And How to Fix It)

You launched your website. You're proud of it. But when you type your business name into Google… nothing. Or worse, your competitor shows up instead. Here's exactly why that happens — and the step-by-step fix.

AS
Alpha Seed Web Design
Updated for 2026

Why this matters

68%

of online experiences start with a search engine

0.63%

of people click past Google's first page

46%

of Google searches have local intent

76%

of "near me" searchers visit a business that day

Sources: BrightEdge 2023, Backlinko 2024 (4M search results), Google/BrightLocal

📋 Table of Contents (click to expand)
  1. 1. Google Hasn't Found Your Site Yet (Indexing)
  2. 2. Your Title Tag Doesn't Match What People Search
  3. 3. You're Not in the Local Pack (Google Business Profile)
  4. 4. Your Site Loads Slowly or Breaks on Mobile
  5. 5. You Have No Inbound Links (and Your Competitors Do)
  6. 6. Your Site Is Brand New (Patience Required)
  7. 7. The 5-Minute Diagnosis: How to Check
  8. 8. Your 30-Day Fix Plan
  9. 9. Frequently Asked Questions

This is the #1 question small business owners ask us. And the frustration is real — you've spent time and money building a website, your customers tell you they couldn't find you on Google, and you start wondering if the whole thing was a waste.

Here's the good news: in 9 out of 10 cases, the problem isn't your website design. It's one of six specific, fixable issues — most of which you can diagnose in five minutes and address without touching a line of code. Let's walk through them in order, from most common to least.

1 Google Hasn't Found Your Site Yet

This is by far the most common reason. Google doesn't automatically know your website exists — it has to discover, crawl, and index it. The discovery part usually happens when another site links to yours, or when Google's crawler stumbles onto your domain. For a brand-new site with no inbound links, this can take weeks or even months. Some sites are never found at all.

Think of it this way: Google's index is like the world's biggest library catalog. Your website is a book. But if no one tells the librarian your book exists, it never gets shelved — and no one can find it, no matter how good it is.

✅ The Fix (5 minutes, free)

  1. 1 Go to Google Search Console (free) and verify you own your domain. This takes 2–3 minutes.
  2. 2 Submit your sitemap. If your site was built properly, you'll have a file at yourdomain.com/sitemap.xml. Enter that URL in Search Console → Sitemaps → Add.
  3. 3 Use the "URL Inspection" tool in Search Console, paste your homepage URL, and click "Request Indexing." This fast-tracks Google to visit your site.
  4. 4 Get one or two real links pointing at your site — a local chamber of commerce listing, a Yelp page, or a social media profile with your URL. This signals to Google that your site is real.

⏱ Time to results: With Search Console submission, most new sites are indexed within 2–7 days. Without it, expect 2–8 weeks — or never.

2 Your Title Tag Doesn't Match What People Search

Your title tag is the blue clickable text that appears in Google search results. It's also one of Google's strongest ranking signals. If yours says "Home" or "Welcome" or just your URL — Google has almost nothing to work with.

We see this constantly on restaurant sites. The page title is literally "Mysite" (the Wix/Weebly default). Customers searching "Italian restaurant Asheville" will never find a page titled "Mysite."

✅ The Formula

Bad title tag

Home | Mysite

Good title tag

Bella Roma Italian Restaurant | Downtown Asheville

Template you can copy

[Your Business Name] | [What You Do] | [Your City]

Keep it under 60 characters so Google doesn't cut it off. Put your main keyword near the start.

How to check yours: Open your website in any browser. Hover your mouse over the browser tab — that little text is your title tag. Or right-click → "View Page Source" and search (Ctrl+F) for <title>.

The title tag is one of the easiest SEO wins on the planet. If yours is generic, fixing it can move you from page 5 to page 1 for branded searches — sometimes within a week.

3 You're Missing From the Local Pack

For local businesses — restaurants, salons, plumbers, photographers, accountants — the most important real estate on Google isn't even the regular search results. It's the Local Pack: the box at the top with three businesses, a map, and review stars. This is what mobile searchers tap first.

1,000%+

Businesses in Google's Local Pack get more traffic than the rest of page 1 combined

Source: WordStream local search study

Getting into the Local Pack has almost nothing to do with your website — it's controlled by your Google Business Profile (the free listing that powers Google Maps). If you haven't claimed and completed yours, you're invisible to the majority of local searchers, no matter how good your website is.

✅ The Fix (20 minutes, free)

  1. 1 Go to business.google.com and search for your business name. If it exists (Google may have auto-created it), claim it. If not, create it.
  2. 2 Fill in every single field: business category (this matters most — pick the most specific one), hours, phone, website, description, photos (add at least 10), and services.
  3. 3 Verify (Google will mail a postcard with a code, or in some categories offer instant/video verification).
  4. 4 Ask your 5 happiest customers for reviews this week. Reviews are the single biggest Local Pack ranking factor you can control.

💡 Pro tip: Businesses that post weekly Google Business Profile updates (photos, offers, events) get 2.7x more calls and direction requests than inactive ones (BrightLocal 2024). It takes 2 minutes a week.

4 Your Site Is Slow or Breaks on Mobile

In 2019, Google switched to mobile-first indexing — meaning the mobile version of your site is what Google actually ranks, not the desktop version. In 2026, this is the only version that matters: 63% of all Google searches happen on mobile.

If your site loads slowly (more than 3 seconds on a phone), Google actively demotes it. If it's not mobile-friendly at all — text too small, links too close together, horizontal scrolling required — you might not rank at all. This is especially common on old Wix/Weebly sites built before 2018.

✅ The Fix

  1. 1 Test your site free at pagespeed.web.dev. You'll get a score for mobile and desktop. Anything under 50 (out of 100) on mobile is a serious problem.
  2. 2 Common culprits: images not compressed (huge JPEGs), third-party widgets (chat, booking, social feeds), outdated page builders, and render-blocking scripts. A redesign with modern, lightweight code usually fixes all of these at once.
  3. 3 Check "Core Web Vitals" in Search Console — Google flags pages that fail its real-world performance thresholds. Fixing these can move rankings noticeably within weeks.

📈 See our deep dive: We wrote an entire article on how page speed affects your revenue, with industry benchmarks and a fix-it checklist.

5 You Have No Inbound Links

Google treats every link from another website to yours as a "vote." More votes (especially from reputable, relevant sites) = higher rankings. If your site has zero inbound links and your competitor has 50, they'll outrank you almost every time — even with a worse website.

This is why brand-new sites struggle: they start with zero "votes" and have to earn them. But here's the thing — for local businesses, you don't need thousands of links. You need a handful from the right places.

✅ Free link sources every local business can get

  • Google Business Profile (the link from your listing counts)
  • Local chamber of commerce (usually free or cheap member listing)
  • Yelp, TripAdvisor, BBB (free business listings)
  • Industry-specific directories (OpenTable for restaurants, The Knot for wedding vendors, Healthgrades for medical, etc.)
  • Local newspaper event listings (free if you're hosting or sponsoring something)
  • Social media profiles (Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn all link to your site)
  • Guest posts or features on local blogs (offer to write something useful for free)

⚠️ Warning: Never buy links or use "auto-submit to 1,000 directories" services. Google penalizes this aggressively and can tank your rankings for months. Quality > quantity, always.

6 Your Site Is Simply Too New

Sometimes there's no specific problem — you just need patience. According to Ahrefs' study of 2 million pages, only 5.7% of newly published pages reach Google's Top 10 within one year. For competitive keywords, the average is closer to 3–6 months of consistent effort.

This is normal. Google's algorithm trusts sites that have proven themselves over time. A brand-new domain has to build that trust. The good news: if you do everything else in this guide correctly, you'll see steady progress — more impressions in Search Console each week, then clicks, then rankings.

📈 Realistic timeline for a new local business site

Week 1–2

Site indexed. Shows up for exact business name searches.

Month 1–2

Ranks for "[business name] [city]" and long-tail variations. Starts appearing in Google Maps for nearby searches.

Month 3–4

Competes for category searches like "best [your type] in [city]" if reviews and content are strong.

Month 6–12

Top 3 Local Pack position becomes realistic with 20+ reviews and ongoing content/updates.

The 5-Minute Diagnosis

Not sure which of the six problems you have? Run this checklist. Total time: 5 minutes. Free.

?

Test 1: Is your site indexed?

Google site:yourdomain.com (replace with your URL). If you see 0 results, your site is not indexed. → Fix #1

?

Test 2: What does your title tag say?

Hover over your browser tab. If it says "Home," "Untitled," "Mysite," or just your URL → Fix #2

?

Test 3: Are you in the Local Pack?

Search "[your type of business] near me" on your phone. Do you appear in the map box at the top? If not → Fix #3

?

Test 4: Is your site mobile-fast?

Run it through pagespeed.web.dev. Mobile score under 50? → Fix #4

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Test 5: Do you have any backlinks?

Check your site free at ahrefs.com/backlink-checker. Under 5 referring domains? → Fix #5

Your 30-Day Fix Plan

Don't try to do everything at once. Follow this order — each step builds on the last.

📅 Week 1: Get Found

  • ✓ Set up Google Search Console & submit sitemap
  • ✓ Request indexing for your homepage
  • ✓ Claim or create your Google Business Profile
  • ✓ Fix your homepage title tag (15 minutes)

📅 Week 2: Get Complete

  • ✓ Fill out 100% of your Google Business Profile (photos, hours, services)
  • ✓ Write a homepage meta description (under 155 characters)
  • ✓ List your business on Yelp, Bing Places, Apple Maps Connect
  • ✓ Add your URL to all your social media profiles

📅 Week 3: Get Reviews

  • ✓ Email or text your 10 happiest customers asking for a Google review
  • ✓ Create a short link (e.g., bit.ly/yourbusiness-review) to make it easy
  • ✓ Respond to every review (good and bad) within 24 hours
  • ✓ Post your first Google Business Profile update (photo or offer)

📅 Week 4: Get Technical

  • ✓ Run PageSpeed Insights — fix what you can (compress images, remove unused plugins)
  • ✓ Check Search Console for any "Coverage" or "Core Web Vitals" errors
  • ✓ Contact your local chamber of commerce about a listing
  • ✓ Plan one piece of content per month going forward (blog post, FAQ, photo gallery)

After 30 days, you should see:

  • ✓ Your site showing up for branded searches (your business name)
  • ✓ First reviews appearing on your Google listing
  • ✓ Impressions ticking up in Search Console
  • ✓ Appearance in Google Maps for nearby searches

Rankings for competitive keywords take longer (3–6 months). Don't panic — keep going.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take for Google to find my new website?
If you submit your URL through Google Search Console, Google typically crawls and indexes a new site within 2–7 days. Without submission, it can take weeks or months — and some sites are never found because they have zero inbound links. To speed it up: submit your sitemap in Search Console, share your URL on social media, and get listed in a couple of reputable local directories.
Why can't I find my website when I Google my business name?
The most common reasons are: (1) the site isn't indexed yet, (2) Google found a different, older version of your business listing, (3) your homepage title tag doesn't include your business name, or (4) you're searching from a different location. Check Search Console's URL Inspection tool — if it says "URL is not on Google," that's the problem. Fix your title tag, submit the page for indexing, and create a Google Business Profile with a link to your site.
Do I need to pay Google to show up in search results?
No. Organic (non-paid) Google results are free. Google Ads (the "Sponsored" listings at the top) are paid, but they are completely separate from organic rankings — paying for ads does not improve your organic position. For a local business, the single highest-ROI free action is claiming and completing your Google Business Profile, which often lands you in the Google Maps "Local Pack" without spending a dollar.
Why is my competitor ranking above me when their website is worse?
Google ranks pages based on hundreds of signals, not just visual design. Your competitor may have: an older, more trusted domain; more inbound links; more content; a more complete Google Business Profile; more Google reviews; or they may simply have been indexed longer. A new or redesigned site typically takes 3–6 months to compete. Focus on consistent local SEO signals (name, address, phone consistency across directories) and earning reviews — these compound over time.
Can a web designer help me show up on Google?
A good web designer handles the technical foundation Google needs: fast loading, mobile-friendly layout, proper title/description tags, structured data (schema markup), a clean URL structure, and a submitted XML sitemap. They can also set up Google Business Profile and Search Console. These technical factors are necessary but not sufficient — ongoing content, reviews, and local citations are what move rankings over months. Look for a designer who explicitly includes SEO setup, not just "a pretty site."

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