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What Page Am I On?

         

peterinwa

6:57 am on Oct 8, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Searching for one keyword my site comes up #1 on page one of search results, but with another I'm on around page 50. So I'm playing with keywords to see if I can improve things.

My problem is that it takes so long to look through maybe 75 pages to find my site. Is there a way to find, for example, that searching for "whateverkeyword" my site is listed on page 60 or whatever without looking through all the pages?

Thanks, Peter

TheDave

9:46 am on Oct 8, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



www.google.com/ie?q=lots+of+results&num=100

The first thing is the "ie" - this tells google to list the pages for displaying in internet explorer's search panel.

The second thing is the "&num=100" which tells google to display 100 results.

This is about as good as it gets, as far as I know

Mohamed_E

10:02 am on Oct 8, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Does it really matter whether you are on page 10 or on page 50? I treat "beyond page 5" as meaning "nowhere to be found".

You can, of course, use the Google API [google.com] to automate the job. The Google Hacks book is a great place to start learning about that tool.

peterinwa

2:43 pm on Oct 8, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



TheDave: Thanks, that works great! And having "visited" the link to my site the color is different making it easy to find in the results list.

I did notice a little difference in the rankings using the different search methods, but it will sure be easier to track my progress this way.

Mohamed_E: Actually, I treat being beyond page 2 as "nowhere to be found." But by checking my ranking I can test the results of using different keywords in my title and description and homepage text.

I'm just a retired old man with a not-for-profit website for a hobby so this isn't as serious to me as it is to many of you business people. But I am still very proud of my Google acomplishment: Being listed #1 in the results searching for "onekeyword." It took over two years.

Weight loss is a big business and I'm sure there are a lot of companies out there that would like to be in my position. Now, just recently, I discovered that "anotherkeyword" gets twice as many searches as "onekeyword" so I'm working on that.

Thanks for your posts!

P.S.

The above was edited as suggested in the following post.

[edited by: peterinwa at 3:23 pm (utc) on Oct. 8, 2003]

claus

3:00 pm on Oct 8, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



peterinwa, you might want to edit that post so that is is not specific and does not include the real keywords. This is a competitive business, as you mentioned - just a piece of advice ;) Oh, i think it's against the TOS also, by the way - probably for the same reason.

As to the differences in results: An ordinary google search will show some results from same site that are indented. These results are not included in the "ie?" type search.

/claus