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Google

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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
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Google's sandbox: delayed inclusion of new websites

Google's penalties: getting penalized

Google's
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search engines

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How to be informed when a search engine spider visits your site

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How search engines work

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
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12 ways to exceed your client's expectations every time!

Market reseach for new online business

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Web
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How to market your website: five keys to web site marketing success

How to market your website: the five web marketing laws

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How to market your website: a mixed marketing media approach

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Google's ranking algorithms - Part 4 of 4 articles

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 reveals details of algorithms that Google uses in addition to its main ranking algorithms.

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 1
Click here to read part 2
Click here to read part 3

Part 4: How search results and user data can affect your rankings

Tracking the click-throughs

The patent specification indicates that Google might track how often users click on a page when it is listed in the search results pages. Google might also track the amount of time that users spend "accessing the document".

It seems that Google might be tracking click-throughs and rewarding those sites with higher click through rates (similar to what Google does with their AdWords program).

The patent specification also indicates that Google might track the behavior of web surfers through bookmarks, cache, favorites, and temporary files (possibly with the Google toolbar and the Google desktop search tool).

The patent specification indicates that Google might track the following information:

What does this mean to your web site?

If Google really tracks the click-throughs to your web site, you should make sure that your web pages have attractive titles so that web surfers click on them in the search results.

Make your web pages interesting enough so that web surfers stay some time on your web site. It might also help if your web site visitors added your web site to their bookmarks.

Make sure that your web page content is optimized for Google. The ranking factors mentioned in the patent specification are only additional factors. If your web page content is not optimized, all other ranking factors won't help you much.

Click here to read part 1
Click here to read part 2
Click here to read part 3 

This is a group of three articles from http://www.axandra.com/news

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