{
  "slug": "how-to-trigger-a-workflow-when-google-extended-access-changes-on-our-wordpress",
  "url": "https://answers.trakkr.ai/how-to-trigger-a-workflow-when-google-extended-access-changes-on-our-wordpress",
  "question": "How to trigger a workflow when Google-Extended access changes on our WordPress?",
  "description": "Learn how to monitor AI crawler access on your WordPress site to ensure visibility and trigger automated workflows when access configurations change.",
  "summary": "Maintain AI visibility by monitoring crawler access on WordPress. Use Trakkr to track technical crawler diagnostics and trigger automated alerts whenever your robots.txt or server-side access configurations are modified.",
  "answer": "To monitor AI crawler access on WordPress, you must audit your robots.txt file and server-side access logs for changes that restrict AI visibility. Once you establish a baseline for expected crawler behavior, integrate Trakkr to automate the detection of technical access modifications. Trakkr provides proactive alerts when crawler diagnostics shift, allowing your team to respond immediately to potential indexing issues. This workflow ensures that your content remains accessible to AI systems, preventing accidental blocks that could negatively impact your brand's presence across major answer engines and AI platforms.",
  "keywords": [
    "how to trigger a workflow when google-extended access changes on our wordpress",
    "monitor ai crawler access",
    "wordpress ai crawler access",
    "ai crawler monitoring"
  ],
  "keywordVariants": [
    "how to trigger a workflow when google-extended access changes on our wordpress",
    "track ai bot activity",
    "robots.txt crawler configuration",
    "ai visibility diagnostics",
    "automated crawler alerts"
  ],
  "entities": [
    "WordPress",
    "Trakkr",
    "AI crawlers",
    "robots.txt"
  ],
  "createdAt": "2025-12-02",
  "reviewedAt": "2026-04-29",
  "publishedAt": "2026-04-29",
  "articleSection": "Technical Optimization",
  "tags": [
    "Technical Optimization",
    "WordPress",
    "Trakkr",
    "AI crawlers",
    "how to trigger a workflow when google-extended access changes on our wordpress",
    "monitor ai crawler access"
  ],
  "author": {
    "id": "trakkr-research",
    "name": "Trakkr Research",
    "role": "Research team",
    "url": "https://answers.trakkr.ai/authors/trakkr-research/"
  },
  "collections": [
    {
      "slug": "collections/technical",
      "title": "Technical Optimization"
    }
  ],
  "guides": [
    {
      "slug": "technical-ai-visibility",
      "title": "Technical AI visibility setup for crawlers, schema, and discovery",
      "url": "https://answers.trakkr.ai/guides/technical-ai-visibility/"
    },
    {
      "slug": "alerts-and-monitoring",
      "title": "How to set up AI visibility alerts and monitoring workflows",
      "url": "https://answers.trakkr.ai/guides/alerts-and-monitoring/"
    }
  ],
  "sources": [
    {
      "label": "Google Gemini",
      "url": "https://gemini.google.com/",
      "type": "external-platform"
    },
    {
      "label": "Google robots.txt introduction",
      "url": "https://developers.google.com/search/docs/crawling-indexing/robots/intro",
      "type": "external-doc"
    },
    {
      "label": "Schema.org HowTo",
      "url": "https://schema.org/HowTo",
      "type": "standard"
    },
    {
      "label": "Trakkr docs",
      "url": "https://trakkr.ai/learn/docs",
      "type": "first-party"
    }
  ]
}