Metadata indexing is the process by which app stores crawl and catalog an app's textual information—title, subtitle, description, keywords—to make it searchable and discoverable. Proper indexing ensures your app's metadata is recognized by store algorithms and appears in relevant search results.
What It Is
Metadata indexing refers to how app stores like Apple App Store and Google Play automatically scan and organize an app's textual elements. The store indexes:
- App title and subtitle
- App description and promotional text
- Keyword fields (when available)
- Developer name and category tags
- In-app purchase descriptions
Indexing happens continuously as you update your wiki:metadata and is essential for wiki:keyword-research effectiveness.
Why It Matters for ASO
Without proper indexing, even perfectly researched keywords won't help your app rank:
- Visibility: Indexed metadata determines which search queries your app appears for
- Ranking signals: Stores use indexed content to match user intent with your app
- Freshness: Indexes update periodically; new metadata may take hours or days to fully process
- Multilingual reach: Each language version is indexed separately, critical for wiki:localization-strategy
Key Things to Know
- Timing: Changes to your wiki:app-title or description don't instantly affect rankings. Allow 24–72 hours for full re-indexing.
- Content matters: Stores index exact text; typos and unnatural keyword stuffing may reduce indexing effectiveness or trigger algorithm penalties.
- Store differences: Apple and Google use different indexing rules. Apple emphasizes title and keyword field; Google weighs description and category more heavily.
- Duplicate content: Repeating the same phrase across title, subtitle, and description doesn't boost indexing—it may dilute signal.
- Non-indexed elements: Ratings, reviews, and download count are not part of traditional metadata indexing but influence wiki:ranking-factors through other mechanisms.
- Testing impact: A/B testing descriptions can help you understand how different indexed text affects discovery, though changes take time to propagate.
Effective ASO depends on creating clear, keyword-relevant wiki:metadata that indexes cleanly and matches genuine user search behavior.