Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
The key algo element of Jagger2 I see is that much more so than in the past two years, "a link is a link" in terms of market niche/relevance (offtopic links same as on topic links), but keyword repetition is greatly more valued. Automated, indescriminate stuff is doing very well, while sites relying more on a few (rather than a lot) of authority links have gone down a bit.
In terms of not-good stuff, this is the sort of thing that Google should be able to correct especially with enough feedback, so hopefully people who care about the quality of the index will be sending feedback as suggested.
No sandbox, lost site, supplemental or canonical changes at all, so Jagger3 becomes the Holy Grail...
>>Google are seriously going on the "report spam" trail.<<
I guess so. Lets keep Google WebSpam Team busy ;-)
Please start reporting those spammers here:
[google.com...]
In the "Additional details:" section, you would use the keyword "jagger2" (that's "jagger" and the number two with no spaces in between).
It's amazing how we can experience two polar opposite events steve, I'm seeing the exact opposite of what you're seeing, I'd love to know the categories you're looking at. Personally, if this keeps up, which I hope it doesn't, I'm going to have to move a site to a dedicated server. But other sites are just sinking like rocks.
This update has to be one of the slickest ones google has ever done, I still have not seen anyone who can agree on even what is happening, steve sees black, I see white, and we are both seeing something real. My hats off to the google team, gguy, this one is really spectacular if confusing seos is the game...
re googleguy's request for spam results, note that this isn't the standard spam reports that are just ignored except for google building up profiles etc of what spam sites look like, this one sounds like google actually wants to see if jagger1/2 is functioning re dumping spam, I know one heavily commercial search I did this morning gave me 10 results that were totally spam and seo influence free. Very impressive.
I see the same thing on the KWs that I'm watching: either directories that are just awful, news from MSNBC internal pages or some other HUGE corps.
I guess Google is just deleting sites from the index. there are many in my sector that have wiped out. some very good sites that I admired - none of these NASDAQ listed replacement sites will ever do justice in terms of content. may as well not have sites in the SERPs at all - just ads. this is the trend I'm seeing.
Another type, in aggressively competive categories, is being hit really hard.
This to me in many ways just looks like a new hilltop filter, or maybe the removal of the old hilltop filter and its replacement with something else.
Non-hilltop type searches are seeing no change at all from where I'm looking, hilltop type searches are seeing huge changes, and I'm seeing in the categories that are dropping 1 of two things, like most other posters here:
1. big companies, name brand
2. sites that used different seo techniques than we used, but which are still heavily seoed. Early tests showed some patterns in the methods those sites are using, but nothing is for sure yet.
Either that, or the authority knob just got turned up a lot, that would in most cases explain everything I see, in both types of searches. A commercial site will almost by definition have authority level status, since so many sites link to it in its specific context.
I just looked at the results from the simple joe user key in the words and hit the button.
I got back a pile of stuff mostly marked as supplemental but was mainly directory sites parked on medical domain names amoungst others..
Being operated by some comp based in Gibraltar, they seem to like most sectors of what would be considered the shelter industry.
It looks to me like someone is trying to spam LSI based systems.
The thing they share is not topic, but a much more generalized authority status within their niche areas. This status cannot be faked, I know the work it took to achieve it, and it cannot be purchased or duplicated without actually doing all the work that lies behind it.
But for commercial stuff, yeah, it looks like maybe this is rolling out sector by sector, which would explain why google is looking to get as many spam reports as they can right now.
In the main commercial sector I'm looking at, that's just getting fine tuned now, not massively different than it was 4 weeks ago, or 3, whenever the beta stuff ran through the first datacenters.
And most sites being returned are of some utility to the searcher, it's not really spam, maybe 3 or 4 out of top 20, but even those are a fine choice among that niche. And since I know some of what they do, they could be knocked out of their spots just as easily as we were, it just takes a slightly different twist of the dials.
From now on, I'm only working to create authority level sites, no tricks, no directories, slow growth, the google game is not worth playing any more.
This is definitely interesting, whatever it is, and it's obvious that if you only are watching one sector, you can't make any real meaningful overall conclusions at this point, maybe next week though.
[edited by: 2by4 at 9:53 pm (utc) on Oct. 26, 2005]
news from MSNBC internal pages or some other HUGE corps.
I'm noticing that our site, which hosts many varying articles on our niche market loses out to one article features done by newspapers/corps or about.com . This is just the top 2 positions though...anything after position #2 turns instantly to mush. Then on page 3 the quality returns.
For my keywords: Major player companies take first 2 positions, then by page 3 niche sites seem to return.
Just my observations.
What is the definition of an "Authority Site" - I thought one of our sites was one, but now that it lost it's Google status I wonder. Yahoo & MSN still like the site, which has been it's saving grace.