Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
My question is - now im in the general listings is it possible to continue to move up the rankings once you are out of the sandbox through more optimising or am i likely to stay below the first page as my site is only 5 months old and Google appears to prefer old established sites?
thanks
My question is - now im in the general listings is it possible to continue to move up the rankings once you are out of the sandbox through more optimising or am i likely to stay below the first page as my site is only 5 months old and Google appears to prefer old established sites?
Of course you can improve your ranking!
Google doesn't prefer old esthabilished sites.It doesn't evaluate sites upon a seniority criteria (or at least not only).It allocates ranking on the base of an algorithm composed of many different variables (over 2000 if I'm not wrong).
Your site is very young that's true.But you can bring it higher by better optimizing.
You could start selecting only some pages to optimize avoiding to disperse unusefully your efforts.
And targeting less competitive keywords for the moment.Find your niche.The golden keywords will be next.
Another useful thing to do, is continously monitor the trend of the site with a specific software so to know exactly in wich way to move.
More quality inbound links...
These are only few advices to point you on the right way;the rest is at you...
Regards
Welcome to WebmasterWorld!
Google is not one big computer. It is a distributed system of thousands of computers. Every time you connect you may get a different one. Therefore, it's probable that your site is ranked well in some of them but not others.
It's possible that the new index (database) where your site ranked well will propagate to the other servers over the next few days. On the other hand, it may be that your site ranked well in an "experimental" database that was loaded on some of their servers and has now been backed out. We'll hope for the former situation... :)
If you haven't read it yet, this classic [webmasterworld.com] is worth thorough study.
Jim
muzzy
I guess you have been hit by what I call "Rotating Algos" syndrome :-)
To learn more about the "Rotating Algos", please view the following two messages:
msg #:307
[webmasterworld.com...]
msg #:287
[webmasterworld.com...]
<Google is not one big computer. It is a distributed system of thousands of computers. Every time you connect you may get a different one. Therefore, it's probable that your site is ranked well in some of them but not others.>
Jim
In an honest attempt to understand the relation between datacenters (groups/subgroups) and page ranking on the serps, I wish to ask for your openion of the reason(s)
- why a site might rank well in some data centers but not others?
- and what possible variables govern at anytime Google´s choice of showing serps from specific group/subgroups of the datacenters.
Thanks.. and God bless.
Most of the key phrases put me in the top 3 positions woopie! If my site is any indication, yours will settle out too.
> why a site might rank well in some data centers but not others?
Different algorithms or different weighting factors with the same algorithm. Maybe that datacenter has a completely-different index (database). Any number of reasons, really -- you'd have to ask Google... ;)
> and what possible variables govern at anytime Google´s choice of showing serps from specific group/subgroups of the datacenters.
I suspect this is mainly just a side effect of dynamic load balancing, where requests are routed to many datacenters and servers within those datacenters using round-robin DNS so as to balance the load regionally and perhaps even globally. Google, like other providers, uses a short time-to-live on their DNS, so every time your browser makes a request, it may get a different IP address for "google.com."
You can force your browser to use a specific IP address if you like, by specifying a fixed IP address for google.com in your hosts file ( C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\etc\hosts on Win XP ). But then you're left with a fundamental problem: Which google IP address do you pick? There isn't any guarantee that you'll pick an IP address for a data center that represents what the "next" index will look like.
Jim