Search Engine Toolbar
Guide Part 2
by David CallanGoogle toolbar
We have touched upon the Google toolbar above, briefly. Now onto
the full details of the Google toolbar and its features for
webmasters. The Google toolbar is currently the most popular
toolbar available for download on the net. Thousands of webmasters
use it, as it is an excellent competitive intelligence tool, it
even has its own forum dedicated to it at the highly popular
http://www.webmasterworld.com discussion forums site.
First of all I will mention the different elements of the Google
toolbar and then describe how webmasters can use them to their
advantage. The Google toolbar includes most notably the Pagerank
scale, cache version tool, highlight button, backwards links tool,
category button, search site button and a similar pages tool.
The Pagerank scale is likely to be the most popular feature of the
Google toolbar, it allows webmasters to check the importance of a
certain website within the Google index. The Pagerank™ scale goes
from 1 to 10 on the toolbar. A less important site is a site with
a PR of 1 and a very very important site is a site with a PR of
10.
To get the Pagerank figure you have to hold the mouse over the
Pagerank scale which is a green horizontal bar located usually in
the center of the toolbar, however this depends on your personal
configuration of the toolbar. This information is very useful to
webmasters wishing to swap links not just for extra traffic from
other sites but also for better rankings in Google as it allows
you to see how important Google views a potential link partner to
be. Remember Google says:
"Votes cast by pages that are themselves "important" weigh more
heavily and help to make other pages "important."
To use this tool, you should in conjunction with the Alexa ranking
figure search for sites related to yours with a good ranking
figure in Alexa and a medium to high ranking on the Pagerank scale
on the Google toolbar. Both toolbars can be visible at the same
time so this is very easy to do.
The cache version tool although not as important as the Pagerank
scale is quite useful when used with the highlight button. Let me
explain. When you click through to a site from a results page in
Google you are taken to that site's current page, you are not
necessarily taken to the page that Google examined to determine
its ranking, that page could have been updated weeks or even
months ago.
This presents a problem if like many webmasters out there you like
to examine your competitors pages to try and determine why Google
liked them so much and hence gave them a good ranking. However
Google being Google has this very neat feature, called page
caching, whereby the Googlebot will take a snapshot of the page
which it last examined to determine ranking so you can see the way
the page was then.
While on the cached version of the page you should enter your
keywords or keyphrases into the search box (don't press enter) and
press the highlight button tool. This will highlight all the
occurrences of your search terms with different colors. The
highlight tool will allow you to get a quick overview of the
keyword distribution of a competing page, the bigger the
highlight, the more weight that section of page had in determining
that pages position in the results of a search. The highlight tool
is also useful for finding hidden text if you suspect your
competitors might be using such a method.
Like Alexa, Googles toolbar also has a backward links tool,
whereby you can see all sites which link to a particular site.
Useful for siphoning traffic away from your competitors by finding
who links to them and then emailing them webmasters to link to you
too.
The category button allows users to quickly locate the category
that a website is listed within in the Google directory, if indeed
it is listed at all. This allows webmasters to search for quality
sites to link with, as a listing in the ODP (Google gets its
directory results from the ODP) usually indicates a site of high
quality, it also allows them to visit that category page and
quickly find sites to link with that have a high ranking on the
pagerank scale. This is because results in the Google directory
are automatically returned in order of descending pagerank, the
best and most popular being at the top of the page.
Finally we come to the site search button and the similar pages
tool which I will only briefly touch on. The site search button
allows webmasters to see immediately how many pages of their site
Google has indexed. They simply visit their homepage and press the
site search button and enter something generic that will always
occur on every page, like the letter 'a' or 'e', the engine will
then return results with all indexed pages.
The similar pages tool will provide you with, not surprisingly
links to pages which Google deems similar, these links are prime
candidates for link exchanges as Google already knows they are
related to your industry. The Google toolbar for Internet Explorer
is available free of charge from
http://toolbar.google.com
A less sophisticated feature limited Netscape version is available
free of charge from
http://googlebar.mozdev.org
Well here we are at the end of another article, you have just
learned the 'ins' and 'outs' of using two very popular and very
free tools in your quest for success. However Alexa and Google are
not the only two providers of free toolbars on the net, many
engines are now offering them as an added incentive to use their
systems. I suggest you tryout and examine others before settling
on the two mentioned in this article, in saying that though my
mind is made up. The Google and Alexa toolbars rock!
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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