Forum Moderators: open
thanks
Indexing has everything to do with content, site architecture, and incoming links (and the anchor text they use) and very little to do with the domain name (except in the cases of the domain name using your target keyword).
I would take a hard look at the website and make sure that there isn't any silliness like a frameset with a noframes tag that reads "<body></body>" or even worse: "<p>your browser doesn't support frames</p>"
There are a myriad of more likely reasons for not being indexed properly.
A google for
virgin
returns a lot of top 10 positions for URLs that contain the word virgin
doubt that Richard Branson would agree with that!
try getting some inbound links to the site, with decent PR (over pr4), and chances are freshdeepbot[TM] will pick it up for a couple of days, then it will get included in the next index.
could be that whoever had the domain name before him was permanentl banned from google, too, i would imagine. in which case you would need to contact google, find out if that's the case, then prove to them that your friend is the new site owner, and it domain wasn't his when it got banned...in which case your friend could be in the next index also.
i dunno.
.. and i dont see why he wouldnt get listed
Google won't index without inbound links. It's like saying, we have a nice new island, good roads, nice parking, cheap gasoline, but hey, no traffic. We double-checked the roads, every thing looks OK. And yes, there is not even a single sign pointing to our beautiful resort and all the maps still don't show this new island in the lake. But where is the traffic?
Get some links, and Google at least add the URL of this site to the index. If there is no robots.txt or similar meta tag stopping the bots, it will even spider the home page and add it to the index. If the links are OK, Google will also index the rest.
a) no detectable inbound links (neither in google nor ATW)
b) a huge blocks of javascript that should have been external and referenced as a relative link.
c) not even basic optimization (no alt tags, poorly chosen title tags, etc).
d) bad HTML code (links to a graphic file as "file:///C¦/WINDOWS/Desktop/" instead of referencing the server).
e) as far as directories are concerned, the site has a "coming soon" section, so that will block directory submissions.
This is what I detected in a cursory glance - they may be more silliness, but I was too lazy to look, this was more than enough to explain the problem.