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Sandboxed Sites - Back Together?

Do they come out together or one by one?

         

McMohan

10:09 am on Nov 20, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Most of the new sites that I work with are still in the sandbox. Was just curios to know, if all the sanboxed sites come out of the sandbox during one fine major updation or one by one, over the rolling updates?

That is to say, should one be checking to see if the sites are out of the sandbox regularly or only when they know there is a major Google update? :)

Thanks

Mc

RoySpencer

11:29 pm on Nov 26, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Data point: since being "sandboxed", our previously most commonly searched 2 and 3 word terms fell from the top 5 or 10 in the SERPS, to 200 to 1000 or worse. BUT, for a less common 2 word phrase, we are frequently #1-#3. Virtually all of our traffic is now from the latter, and total G traffic is down about 75%.

Pimpernel

11:34 pm on Nov 26, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



bhd375

We got there by putting one member of staff on the job full-time for the last 6 months just dealing with about 10 sites, putting lots of content on, lots of links, useful resources and spending a huge amount of time contacting web sites and asking for links. No great links, apart from yahoo directory and dmoz, but lots of pretty good ones

alvin123

4:21 am on Nov 27, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Renee great post. Is it possible that this “third index” could be a completely new search engine, based on word cluster technology? And could they be buying time using their existing index until this new engine is complete?

In October at the web 2.0 convention Peter Norvig, director of search quality at Google revealed that they are working on three different tasks to better understand the web. Statistical machine translation, named entities and word clusters. [searchenginelowdown.com...]

“From the demonstration made by Norvig, it is clear that Google is working on ways of improving and innovating its search technology for the future. While start-up Vivisimo may have clustering technology on the market, with the launch of Clusty, there is no doubt that Google has the resources and R&D to ensure that clustering technology is the "PageRank" of the future.”

"[We're] trying to go just beyond keywords and the linking structure of the Web, the innovation that we brought to search, and get behind the deeper meaning," Norvig said during his presentation.

"We want to be able to search and find these [entities] and the relationships between them, rather than you typing in the words specifically," Norvig said.
[eweek.com...]

I hope they come out with something "big" soon, because if they continue with the poor quality results they are now serving, MSN will blow them away.

BillyS

2:43 pm on Nov 27, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I hope they come out with something "big" soon, because if they continue with the poor quality results they are now serving, MSN will blow them away.

For some reason everyone assumes that MSN is better, I'm sorry I just don't see that. Do a search on "money." Not sure that Eddie Money should be up so high at number 12... Of course MSN Money is #1

Sticking with that area on "finance", Yahoo holds the top 6 spots, not sure that is a good thing.

Does this forum think that this type of Google bashing is productive?

I put up a new website at the end of May, here are the facts as they apply to this website. One tweak I made was completely changing the mod_rewrite structure in August, I knew I would take a hit for that. But here are my finding:

Google - has all 700 pages of content in its index that are more than 7 days old, it visits daily to grab pages. I get traffic on non competitive phrases.

Ask - has around 140 pages, all dating back to pre-August (I can tell by the URL). I get traffic from more competitive phrases than Google. It only spiders about 150 pages a month.

Yahoo - has around 3 - 6 pages, all dating back to pre-August. Has slowly removed old pages from a high of around 200. Slurp grabs pages daily - lots of them. Spiders the site at twice the rate of googlebot. I wonder where the new pages are since it's been 3 months. The new pages actually show (around 200) on the Yahoo Beta search site. Which everyone here seems to be ignoring so that tells me what everyone thinks of Yahoo and its search engine.

MSN - Shows exactly zero pages in its index. The MSN beta shows around 150 pages, although it is even more active than Slurp. I rank extremely well in the new MSN search on competitive phrases.

I believe there is something holding this site back in google - sandbox, whatever. But I can wait it out. That being said, I still get more traffic from google than everyone else combined.

The site is pure content, wrapped by Adsense. It took less than 4 weeks to get a DMOZ listing in late June. I also run Adwords to the site. So for those that think those things factor into the sandbox... GUESS again.

elgrande

9:43 pm on Nov 27, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



BillyS, I don't think anyone here believes that those things you mention have anything with the sandbox. If you think that people here are just Google-bashing, then by comparison your post is just WW member-bashing.

People are mainly complaining about (or concerned with) the staleness of Google results and the inability to get new sites into the SERPS. By the number of people reporting similar observations, it does appear to be a significant problem. If the sandbox keeps out new sites, then yes, it affects the quality of Google's results. And if the sandbox is a technical problem and not a deliberate anti-spam measure, then Google could be having some very serious problems, which could enable the competition to catch up to (or surpass) them.

Powdork

7:45 am on Nov 28, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



BillyS,
We're not bashing Google we're discussing Google. Opinions do come up, however, whether valid or not. I personally don't think Google is doing this to promote the usage of Adwords, but it is the only reason I use the program. Has it affected your use of Adwords?
This is either a major problem with Google or a major problem for most of us, or both. In my opinion Google is still far and away the best se out there. But the changes the others would have to make to close the gap are so minimal that it could happen virtually (no pun intended) overnight. For instance Y! could change their results so the same domain couldn't show up more than twice on one page and become much less spammy in an instant.
Additionally, we don't owe Google our allegiance any more than they owe us our living.

MHes

11:18 am on Nov 28, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Hi Gomer
Sorry I didn't get back to you sooner...

>Do you think all new external links are sandboxed or just some new external links?

I think all. Google wants to stop new or old sites hitting the top serp positions quickly via bought links and also wants to have time to examine new sites before it allocates full pr from the link. The sandbox buys them time to run other spiders/algos through the site. They probably have decided that new sites never deserve top positions in competitive searches until they have proven themselves, so they sandbox them. They want a period of time to see a number of links slowly being attributed to a new site and from different types of sites and ip's. Once this 'natural' linking pattern has been seen, they take the site seriously. An established site linking to another established site is subject to the same 'sandbox' with the full effect of the link phasing in over time.

>Do you think this could relate to topic sensitive page rank calculations (just a thought)?

This is where hilltop kicks in, which is where I believe the confusion over sandbox is. There is two new tactics at play. Once a new site has been around for a month or two, it may have passed all the tests via sandbox. It may have 'natural' links in which conforms to a profile that google believes shows a genuine site, like varied links in from directories, links pages, 'authority sites' etc. and the site is seen to have fresh content, original content and no spammy tactics. It then can rank high IF it qualifies according to hilltop. A search takes place for 'widgets' and 10,000 pages appear in the results. These by default have the theme 'widgets'. Only links from these sites in the results count, unless the search term is not competitive so that hilltop cannot be applied. Sites that have links from within these results coming from a nice mix of 'hub sites' and 'authority sites' will rank well. It is very difficult to actively seek and acquire these links via link exchanges. Firstly, exchanging links in itself is probably of little benefit if they are recipricol. Google is placing more importance on one way links which suggests a 'true recommendation'. Secondly, trying to get the mix of different ip's linking to you from different styles of pages and with varied on theme anchor text plus 'broad match' words plus links from pages with the relevant title etc. etc. is a tall order. Add to that the fact that the pages linking to you will also need relevant links in to make them a 'hub' or 'authority' and it all gets very complicated. The only effective way to achieve this is to have good content and let it happen naturally.... which takes time.

I guess that 90% of webmasters here are launching sites with link exchanges and links from their own other sites that just do not help in the 'hilltop' scenario. Older sites have acquired the 'natural' link structure required, hence they are usually doing OK. The older sites that have dropped never pulled in these links over time.

To sum up, if your site has been around for a few months then you are probably not in sandbox. New links to your site are constantly being phased in over time, whether you are an old or new site. Untill you acquire the full value for links from sites appearing in the same search results as yourself, then you will never rank well. The sites that link to you need to have a good 'profile' as well, be it high pr or deemed a 'hub' or 'authority' for the search phrase in question.

The key to ranking well is now time and quality. Time to acquire the full effects of new links in and quality of content to attract links that you can never manufacture or fake. Internal linking is not subject to this time delay thus new pages on an established site rank well and quickly because the linking page has the status to qualify within hilltop and immediately pass full benefit to the new page if it is also relevant for the search term. Internal linking is treated in a very different way to external links, so recipricol links and ip is not an issue.

brixton

11:55 am on Nov 28, 2004 (gmt 0)



"An established site linking to another established site is subject to the same 'sandbox' "
then sacrifice one of your established sites:( in favor of another that is more importent for you:)

brixton

12:06 pm on Nov 28, 2004 (gmt 0)



by the way my 6 months brand new domain and page though it has very few IBL's is ranking well for very competitive terms at the top 100.That makes someone to believe that you dont need tones of links.I have noticed dramatic changes in SERPS for 2 KW's for (hotels) (ie.. widget hotels),pages with tones of links went down the drain....ho.ho.ho Mary XMAS

BeeDeeDubbleU

12:17 pm on Nov 28, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



To sum up, if your site has been around for a few months then you are probably not in sandbox.

Mhes, in the light of all the evidence, albeit circumstancial, to the contrary?

Web design is (thankfully!) not my only occupation. In actual fact it is more of a pre-occupation. But I have been building small business websites now for about three years so I have developed some knowledge of what to expect with regard to ranking.

None of the sites I have built since February this year have developed any Google traffic, bearing in mind that most of my clients are generally not looking for high traffic, having mainly on-line brochure site. I sometimes tweak these sites for nothing and the client's often don't even know I have been doing it. This is because I like to see them gaining some sort of ranking and I can say quite categorically that this is no longer happening. All of the sites I created before this time continue to do well.

I will stand by what I said in an earlier post.

This is not anti spam, it's anti new content. "New" in any other commercial context is attractive and Google would never deliberately restrict all new sites from featuring. This would be committing commercial suicide. Also, if this was an effective spam measure Google, as a commercial entity, would be bragging about it everywhere, "Google announces amazing new spam prevention technology.", etc.

MHes

1:11 pm on Nov 28, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>This is not anti spam, it's anti new content.

No, this is not correct. New content ranks well especially on a 'news site' where the spider visits often and gives new content a temporary boost.

You have to look at this from googles perspective. For 'widgets' they will have thousands of new content every day. They cannot put all this within the top serps. So the decision is easy, established and relevant sites which they know are OK get preference. These are sites with good links in. New sites have to earn that status and it takes time.

>....All of the sites I created before this time continue to do well.

Same experience here and our new sites are nowhere. The reason is simple, older sites have long established links in that pass full pr etc. The linking sites themselves will have been around a long time. They continue to get new links in without a webmaster asking for them and thus are continually ahead of the game. A new site has a long way to catch up, both in having their links fully counted and acquiring 'natural' new links. They will catch up but it will take a long time.

The google link: search is useless, an old site will have considerable links that never show and from other old sites... this is a big advantage.

zgb999

1:34 pm on Nov 28, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



You made some good points MHes.

Short version to get out of sandbox:
Look at top 100 SERPS and get some of those pages to link to you.

Can anybody confirm that this work?

Powdork

1:46 pm on Nov 28, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Mhes,
What is yor take on 301'd links?

MHes

2:13 pm on Nov 28, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Powdork - Don'r know, I have no experience of them :(

BeeDeeDubbleU

4:05 pm on Nov 28, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



New content ranks well especially on a 'news site' where the spider visits often and gives new content a temporary boost.

OK! I meant new content on new sites but I think you know what I meant ;)

You have to look at this from googles perspective. For 'widgets' they will have thousands of new content every day. They cannot put all this within the top serps. So the decision is easy, established and relevant sites which they know are OK get preference.

But this is just not happening. Sure, for a few searches the results are OK but the Googlebot still gorges itself on spammy sites. If Google "knows" (or thinks) that some of the established sites that I am seeing at the top of the results are "OK" then Google is doomed. But then Google may be be hoist by its own petard anyway. I mean its own Adsense scheme, which is the biggest single factor in the explosion of spam on the Internet.

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