For
those who's businesses rely on the Internet to produce revenue the
latest Google update, nicknamed Jagger, was one of the biggest events
in the past couple years (probably since the Florida Update of 2003).
With this 3-part update Google has essentially changed many of the
rules and have thrown the SEO community for a loop.
In
this update there are a few key areas that have impacted the way sites
rank and how an SEO (or a business owner optimizing their own site)
needs to approach and address the various components. The key areas
that have been affected with this update are:
- The history of your web pages
- The way backlinks are counted
- Site content & structure
In
short, the way everything about your site is calculated has changed
however if we pay attention to what has changed in each area we'll
quickly see how to optimize a site and equally important, we'll see
what Google is trying to accomplish with this update. I state that this
as equally important in that understanding what Google is hoping to
accomplish will help us take measures now to protect our rankings
during future updates. We will cover this further below in the
conclusion.
The History Of Your Web Pages
The
history of your website and in fact, the individual pages within it are
playing an increasingly important role in your site's ability to rank
well. The longer your site has been online the better your chances of
ranking highly. Further, the longer a specific internal page has been
live the better it will rank for additional phrases.
What
this means to you is that you will have to take into account the length
of time your domain has been around when you set your expectations
regarding which phrases you should be ranking for. In the beginning of
a promotion you will not want to target an intensely competitive phrase
with hopes of attaining it on Google; rather you will want to select
less competitive secondary phrases that contain the primary phrase
(“seo services” vs. “guaranteed seo services” for example) and optimize
for that. What you will accomplish is rankings on Google for at least a
relevant phrase while at the same time building links with relevancy
for your primary phrase which you will rank well for once your website
has gained history.
The
less competitive the phrase, the more weight the other factors will
have on your ability to rank highly. History is only one factor among
many. For highly competitive phrases where you are competing with sites
that have history and have also addressed the other factors noted below
you will find it extremely difficult to outrank them, however for less
competitive phrases the other factors will hold more weight in that the
other sites will likely not be optimized as strongly for them and thus,
your site stands a much better chance of beating them out.
The Way Backlinks Are Counted
Similar
to the history of your site, the history of the links to your site have
gained importance. As was noted in Google's patent application
#20050071741 titled, “Information retrieval based on historical data,”
links, like sites, gain weight over time. This point was further
clarified in the latest update as sites with longstanding links gained
strength while sites with many new links did not see significant ground
gained. The “sandbox” on links is functioning in fractions in that
after a period of time a link will gain part of it's weight, after a
bit longer, it will gain more, etc. (the exact length of time is of
course a closely guarded secret by Google and likely changes as their
algorithm does). This means your link building today won't create any
substantial effect on your Google rankings until months down the road.
Additionally,
the relevancy of links to your site is still important however Google's
ability to determine relevancy appears to have improved. Pages no
longer have to containing the exact keyword phrases to be relevant but
rather have to be from related industries. For example, a link to an
SEO site from a web design site would be considered relevant even
though the keywords on the page are not specifically related to SEO.
Natural
links have gained weight over unnatural links. Links that are contained
within content areas of a page will be weighted more strongly that
links that appear alone or in a directory-style (like reciprocal links
pages) as they are considered more natural. When you are having links
built to your site try to get them placed within the content (within
the description portion of your reciprocal link for example). Also, in
link building you will want to insure you're varying the terms of your
anchor text. Creating hundreds of links with identical anchor text will
quickly be detected as a link building effort (i.e. not natural) and
thus will carry little weight. Different anchor text for your links
will appear more natural and thus will have a more positive impact on
your rankings.
Site Content & Structure
The
optimal keyword density doesn't appear to have changed but rather
appears to have declined in value altogether. Sites with low keyword
densities are starting to appear more often for phrases based more on
their links than their content and also overall site relevancy.
While
the importance of a specific keyword density on a page has declined,
this has been countered by an increasing importance of relevancy
throughout the site. Google is opting to assign relevancy based more on
the overall content of the site rather than a single page. General
directories will be showing up less and less in exchange for
topic-specific directories. Additionally, sites with a central theme
carried throughout the majority of pages will tend to rank over sites
with a specific page or even section on a topic.
Internal
links are carrying a solid weight in attaching relevancy to specific
internal pages. Properly worded internal links, preferably built into
the content of your site (see note on natural links above) will add
weight to those internal pages and increase the likelihood of those
pages ranking for specific secondary phrases.
Conclusion
While
this update has caused a panic among some SEO's it is clear to see what
Google is looking to accomplish with it. By placing significant weight
on the age of domains and links they have reduced the effectiveness of
buying multiple domains to links together (easier to buy one and spend
your time promoting it) and it has also reduced the value of paid links
in that the buyer will have to pay for the link for months before the
full weight is assigned. In some cases this may cost hundreds or
thousands of dollars simply waiting for the link to gain any real value.
Additionally,
by considering the overall relevancy of a site vs. the relevancy of a
specific page they are allowing relevant sites to rank highly even if
the content is created to be appealing to the human visitor over the
search engine spider. This move helps to weed out less relevant pages
from appearing and increasing the likelihood that a searcher will find
what they're looking for in the results. A site with more pages of
content on a specific topic is more likely to provide the information
being sought than a site with a single page on the topic or a page of
links.
While
not perfect this update has done a lot to address a number of serious
issues with Google's results. To be certain, there is still room for
improvement in cleaning out sp@m results however they are definitely
moving in the right direction. But what does this mean for us?
For
those seeking high rankings on Google this update and the direction it
predicts for future updates indicates that clean tactics will be
necessary. Sp@m is becoming less-and-less effective and it's detection
is becoming stronger and stronger (though certainly not perfect at this
point). Building solid, natural links and creating a site with a lot of
useful, relevant information will win out in the end though the aging
delays on both domains and links mean you will have to be dedicated to
the task. And this is the environment Google is hoping to attain,
dedicated webmasters creating larger, more relevant sites with natural
links. Mission accomplished.