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Keywords
SEO
The factors that play a role in your web site's ranking
Hyperlink
URL tag optimisation
Alternative traffic promotion techniques
Copywriting
Creating effective body descriptions
Writing content: focus on your target audience!
Writing a
business
website homepage
Links
Website's linking architecture
16 rules for a good link exchange request
Pay per click
Pay-per-click: How to increase the
click-through-rate
Pay-per-click search engines list
Pay-per-click:
how to avoid click fraud
How to improve effectiveness in PPC
Pay-per-click:
How to chose keywords
Pay-per-click: Google AdWords account structure
Pay-per-click: Yahoo Search Marketing (SM)
Domain names
Content
spidering
CIRCA technology: applied semantics to search engines
Latent semantic indexing (LSI)
Google's ranking algorithm
part 1/4
Google's ranking algorithm
part 2/4
Google's ranking algorithm
part 3/4
Google's ranking algorithm
part 4/4
Google's
original
patent:
how Google
works
Google's sandbox: delayed inclusion of new websites
Google's penalties: getting penalized
search engines
How search engines evaluate relevancy when ranking search results
How to be informed when a search engine spider visits your site
How to instruct
spiders by means
of the head-tag
How to prevent
duplicate content
Australian search engines list
World major search engine list
Web searchers' behaviour: shocking web users' statistics
Listing expectations: how much better is ranking No. 1 versus No. 10?
web marketing
Seven reasons
why customers
don't buy
12 ways to exceed your client's expectations every time!
Market reseach for new online business
How to set up your best customer profile
12 tips to build
a new SEO
Career
How to market your website: five keys to web site marketing success
How to market your website: the five web marketing laws
How to market your website: miscellaneous marketing strategies
How to market your website: a mixed marketing media approach
miscellaneous
Are you cross-browser compatible? Learn how to do it
Javascript to let visitors bookmark your website
Why your web pages don't load fast enough
Javascript to open a link in a new window

This is a group of three articles from http://www.axandra.com/news
Google has recently filed a patent that details many points that Google uses to rank web pages. The title of the patent is "Information retrieval based on historical data" and it confirms the existence of the Google sandbox and that it can apply to all web pages.
In this article, we're trying to find out what this means to your web site and what you have to do to optimize your web pages so that you get high rankings on Google.
Click here to read part 2
Click here to read part 3
Click here to read part 4
The patent specification revealed a lot of information about possible ways Google might use your web page changes to determine the ranking of your site.
In addition to web page content, the ranking of web pages is influenced by the frequency of page or site updates. Google measures content changes to determine how fresh or how stale a web page is. Google tries to distinguish between real and superfluous content changes.
This doesn't mean that it is always advisable to regularly change the content of your web pages. Google says that stale results might be desirable for information that doesn't need updating while fresh content is good for results that require it.
For example, seasonal results might go up and down in the result pages based on the time of the year.
Google possibly records the following web page changes:
Google might use the results of this analysis to specify the ranking of a web page in addition to its content.
Section 0128 in the patent filing reveals that you shouldn't change the focus of too many documents at once:
"A significant change over time in the set of topics associated with a document may indicate that the document has changed owners and previous document indicators, such as score, anchor text, etc., are no longer reliable.
Similarly, a spike in the number of topics could indicate spam. For example, if a particular document is associated with a set of one or more topics over what may be considered a 'stable' period of time and then a (sudden) spike occurs in the number of topics associated with the document, this may be an indication that the document has been taken over as a 'doorway' document.
Another indication may include the disappearance of the original topics associated with the document. If one or more of these situations are detected, then [Google] may reduce the relative score of such documents and/or the links, anchor text, or other data associated the document."
This means that the Google sandbox phenomenon may apply to your web site if you change your web pages.
What does this mean to your web site?
First of all, you should make sure that your web page content is optimized for Google. If your web page content is not optimized, all other ranking factors won't help you much.
Try to find out if the keywords you target on search engines require static or fresh search results and update your web site content accordingly. Make sure that you don't change too much at once so that your web site won't be put in the sandbox.
In part 2, we'll discuss other important factors that can influence your ranking on Google and that are mentioned in the patent specification.
Click here to read part 2
Click here to read part 3
Click here to read part 4
This is a group of three articles from http://www.axandra.com/news
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