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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

Iguana

11:02 pm on Nov 20, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I just gave up and put the most important set of pages on one of my older sites (same theme but a different angle) and whoooosh from #100+ to #1 on most of the pages moved.

I thought it might be because my new domain didn't have DMOZ entries but reading above I can see that this isn't that likely. I still have 2 old domains I haven't done much with so I can introduce 2 new sites with them. The other thing is that geocities.com has been around a long time and a free site there shouldn't get any sandboxed affect (depends on the area you work in as to whether this is acceptable).

JudgeJeffries

11:48 pm on Nov 20, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



A question that I do find interesting is, if the sandboxed sites are ever released, is what effect will they have on the current serps. It seems that a tidal wave will sweep over over with totally unknown outcome.

scoreman

12:25 am on Nov 21, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



hello guys. I started a website back in May (stand alone site with no backlinks from any other source) and it was in Google within a month. I was getting gbot throughout that time but it wasnt showing. A few months later, I started another 10 sites at once. This time they were showing in the serps within two weeks. The sites have been getting continually fully indexed every 2 weeks... I dont believe the sandbox effect has taken place in any of my sites for longer than a month. And once the gbot comes, it keeps coming back about once a week.

dvduval

12:35 am on Nov 21, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



scoreman, in your post you seem to be only speaking of getting indexed, but not about how you rank for important key phrases and the competitiveness of those phrases.

Vec_One

12:50 am on Nov 21, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Yes, there seems to be widespread confusion about this particular phenomenon. Just to clarify, as I understand it, the sandbox does not affect indexing, PR, or crawling frequency. It just affects ranking for the more competitive terms.

Are your search terms very competitive Scoreman?

fjpapaleo

1:09 am on Nov 21, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I have a pr6 site with over 60,000 pages "indexed" since May. Plenty of back-links. Lots of content, anchor text and all "white hat". Trust me, there's a sandbox. Or more accurately, a supplemental index.

Powdork

1:16 am on Nov 21, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I just gave up and put the most important set of pages on one of my older sites (same theme but a different angle) and whoooosh from #100+ to #1 on most of the pages moved.
That says a lot. Mine is the opposite story. I moved a subdirectory from an old domain to a new one. The pages had many #1 positions while on the old domain. They have been on the new domain for six months now. I have added more links since the move than were there before the move and all the old links should follow the 301s.

Content is king? No, on Google content means zero.

Teshka

2:14 am on Nov 21, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Out of about 8 sites I've launched since May, I've only got one that I don't think has been sandboxed. I started it in early August and it's grown steadily in traffic. It ranks from the 20s to 70s for a couple dozen keywords in a quite competitive (and lucrative to Adsense publishers) field. Although this is a far cry from number #1, the way that it has just been steadily climbing gives me hope of getting up in those top results.

Some interesting things about it...

It's a blog (industry specific)

The site doesn't have its own domain name; it's just under a folder on my typepad account.

It has tons of outgoing links

I post 2-3 times a week

Other than submitting to Yahoo (accepted almost instantly) and the DMOZ (thus far ignored), I've never hunted for links (I recently got a freebie link from a blog off a PR 8 site though).

It went from PR 0 to 5 in the last update

It's already making $10-15 day

Considering the other sites that I've been promoting hardcore have been buried in the sand (and haven't gotten--IMO--the PR they deserve), I'm considering taking a page from the above book and just buying my way into the Yahoo Directory and forgetting about link exchanges.

Broadway

2:15 am on Nov 21, 2004 (gmt 0)

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



I tried to start a "sandbox" thread a week or two ago and it got nixed by the higher powers here at WebmasterWorld. I'm glad this one got through.

I see GoogleGuy comments posted on some fluff Google threads. Clearly he reads everything. It'd be nice to have some sort of statement from Google regarding this topic. If nothing else an actual reason (other than forcing the use of AdWords) for the existence of this Sandbox effect.

Powdork

2:31 am on Nov 21, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Teshka before spending 7*$299 you may want to consider that the most likely reason for your blog's success is that it resides in a folder of a non sandboxed site, not the Y! listing.
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