Indexing Is About Search Matching, Not Just Search Placement
A book does not need to rank well to be indexed, and a poorly ranking book is not automatically unindexed. Indexing is the earlier question: can Amazon connect the book to relevant search terms at all? If the answer appears to be no, authors often describe the book as not indexed. This makes the page distinct from general visibility pages that focus more broadly on discoverability and search exposure.
A Live Listing Can Still Feel Unindexed
Many indexing complaints come from books that are technically live on Amazon. The ASIN may work, the detail page may exist, and the book may even be purchasable, yet the title still fails to appear when the author searches obvious words from the listing. That is why authors often describe the issue as an indexing problem rather than a publishing or availability problem.
Metadata Relevance Shapes How Amazon Understands the Book
Titles, subtitles, keywords, and category context help Amazon interpret what a book is about and which searches it may relate to. If the metadata is vague, misaligned, overly broad, or weakly connected to the actual buyer query, the book may not appear where the author expects. In practice, what looks like missing indexing can sometimes be weak search relevance.
Indexing Problems and Ranking Problems Are Not the Same
Authors often mix together two different frustrations. The first is that the book does not seem to appear for an expected search at all. The second is that the book appears, but too low to matter. The first points toward indexing or search matching. The second points more toward ranking depth, competition, conversion strength, and sales history. Keeping these separate prevents confusion across the cluster.
This Page Should Diagnose the State, Not Explain the Full Repair Process
The purpose of this page is to define and frame the indexing problem clearly. It should help authors understand what the symptom means, what it does not mean, and why indexing is different from general visibility or ranking loss. The separate fix page can then focus on actions, checks, and corrective steps without cannibalizing this page’s intent.
