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I know they didn't just put their heads together and say lets dump the informational sites. It's got to be a result of some change in the algo. It looks to me like root level homepages are given preference. Many edu sites among others have valuable information in sub directories and on other deeper pages. Also if preference is being given to key words in the domain name older established sites are left out. I know I can’t afford to change my domain name and lose the outside backlinks that I already have. There must be other things affecting this as well. Little algo changes. Any ideas?
If those of us with information sites can figure it out perhaps we can get our pages moved up a bit in the serps.
My own experience is that Google is pretty good on non-commercial searches. In fact, I rarely make commercial searches myself (I'm usually after technical data).
<snip>It's interesting to note that Google finds pages in the msdn site quicker than the local MS search engine does! I think that says a lot about Microsoft.
Same experience here, Kaled. Not only does Google find the MSDN pages FASTER than MS does, it finds pages MS' engine just can't!.
I run a small informational site on geocities, and have found Google ranks me fairly high -- beating some bigger, more commercial sites.
I do wonder if H1 & H2 were ignored because they had been re-sized with CSS.
Unless things change with Google I'm just going to concentrate on rating well on 2 and 3 word searches since the one word search has gone commercial.
I'm wondering if Google isn't staying away from the informational sites right now. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
Page Ranking is a relative measurement, not an absolute. It may be that the 20 or so sites between you and your old position have improved their ranking.
Look at the Google cache for some of the sites between your current rank and your previous ranking. That will show you any repetition of keywords, etc. Also, you may find that your competition is putting up cloaked text, etc. The cache gives you a good way to see how google views their site.
may be that the 20 or so sites between you and your old position have improved their ranking.
If you mean ranking in the serps, yes, far more than 20 commercial sites have gone ahead. If you mean PR, no, I still have a PR6 on the page and the sites ahead of me are a mixture of PR5 & PR6 just like it's always been. Geez, I just found a couple of PR4s
As far as cloaking and such is concerned there may or may not be any but it doesn't really matter from my point of view. They've passed me up either way.
I'm starting to notice it in searching now. I was looking for medical information and found mostly stuff that is being sold like herbs, etc. in the top 10.
This will expose an inherent weakness in the google algo because of the way these types of sites have not so far been "greedy" about their google placements (i.e. they have not realised the power they have to position themselves across a range of keywords in their general area). That seems to be coming to an end now as the importance of google is penetrating into the most conservative areas of website development.
Of all our clients the one with the highest PR site is a non commercial 5 page site with no SEM or anything other than a few PR 8 sites linking to it as it has great content.
That said I guess they have algos to deal with the keywords for commercial areas they know spam to the extent they damage the results. ( We will find out soon as a charity client with a PR7 domain just lost it when they forgot to renew. Less than an hour after release it was a lead in to a sex site!)