Google Ranking Tips
By David CallanGoogle is by far the most popular search engine
available today for both ordinary surfers and webmasters alike.
Surfers like it because of the highly relevant results it gives
and the speed at which it delivers them. This is due to its
complex text matching algorithm and of course the Pagerank™ system
that this engine uses. More on the Pagerank™ system later.
Google is popular with webmasters and Internet marketing companies
due to the highly workable ranking system it uses.
Unlike other engines where information about how the results are
obtained are sketchy at best, Google actually publishes
information on its site about the results it produces. Hence
webmasters have things they can do to produce higher rankings.
What also makes Google popular with webmasters is the speed at
which they will spider and list your site. If you're not listed in
Google and submit your URL you're usually indexed within two
weeks. If however your site is already listed in the index Google
should reindex once every month, but more frequently if you've a
high Pagerank™.
This indexing and reindexing time is much quicker than most other
search engines. This allows webmasters to edit their pages
properties such as title, first few lines of text, headings,
keyword distribution and of course the number of incoming links to
their site. They can then discover quickly if the changes they
made were successful or not.
It's because of this popularity that you need to know the workings
of the Google search engine. Without knowledge of it you'll be
ranked lower than all other sites that are only slightly familiar
with the Google algorithm and hence could lose lots of
potential customers.
Google ranking algorithm
Let's now continue onto the main part of this Google rankings
report by indulging ourselves in the Google ranking algorithm.
Well there are two main parts to the algorithm Google uses, the
first is its text matching system whereby Google tries to find
pages relevant to what the searcher has entered in the search box.
The second and equally important part of the algorithm is of
course the Google patented Pagerank™ system.
I'll first go through how to make your pages relevant by
discussing the text matching part of the algorithm.
Google gives a lot of "weight" to the title tag when searching for
keywords. It is therefore vital to make sure your most important
keywords or keyphrases appear within this tag. It seems to work
best if you've other words in your title tag too after your
keywords, but try to remain under 35-40 characters.
I imagine many of you know this already but Google does not use
meta tags such as the keywords meta tag or the description meta
tag. This is because the text within these tags can't be seen by
visitors to a website. Therefore Google feels these tags will be
abused by webmasters placing lots of unrelated words in them in
order to get more visitors.
This lack of support for meta tags means that Google creates your
description from the first few lines of text on your page. This in
turn means that you've to have your keywords and phrases right at
the top of your webpage, if Google finds them your page becomes
more relevant, if however it doesn't find them the rest of your
page has to work harder to become relevant. To see an example of
what I mean scroll back to the top of this page and you'll notice
keyword rich wording similar to:
Google submitting tips, ranking high at google.com, Google
ranking tips, pagerank algorithm, Google algorithm guide.
The above text includes keywords and keyphrases related to the
theme of this page. Now when people search for any of those
keywords or keyphrases this page is much more likely to be near
the top of the results than a page that doesn't imply this
technique.
Google considers keyword density in the body of a page for
determining relevancy too, so make sure your keywords and phrases
appear a couple of times throughout the whole page. Don't go
overboard though, a density of 6-10% seems to work best.
Google has recently been noticed to give a substantial amount of
"weight" to words appearing between the various header tags. These
are tags designed to help you split up sections of your page, so
this approach by Google seems to make sense. The header tags go
from <h6> the smallest to <h1> the biggest, the bigger the heading
tag the more relevent your page will become for the words within
it. It is for this reason that you should always try to have your
most important words within these tags as often as possible
throughout your page.
Other advice about making your page relevant would be to make as
many keywords appear within bold <b> tags as you can. In the past
Google has been known to index text in alt image tags, whether
they still do or not I don't know but it couldn't hurt to include
keywords in these tags anyway.
Continue to Google Ranking Tips Part 2
Article by David Callan. David is an Internet marketing
professional and webmaster of
http://www.akamarketing.com/webmaster-forums/. Visit his
webmaster forums for the latest discussions on search engines,
website authoring and Internet marketing related issues and
topics.
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