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Update Florida - Nov 2003 Google Update Part 4

         

Kackle

5:57 am on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)



Continued from: [webmasterworld.com...]

Kackle - can you explain the "dictionary" for me? And how I might benefit from it - Im reading your posts hard but dont see where youre coming from.

Sure. But you have to act quickly. Google will fix this one just like they fixed the hyphen.

1. Google is depreciating pages/sites that are over-optimized for certain keywords or keyword combinations. It does this by looking up search terms in a dictionary of target keywords or keyword pairs that it has compiled. This dictionary is Top Secret, because if you knew what was in the dictionary, you could avoid these words in your optimization efforts.

2. If the search term or terms hit on a dictionary entry, the search results for that user's search are flagged. This means that before the results are delivered, the order of the links, or even the inclusion of links, are adjusted so as to penalize pages that have overoptimizated for those terms. Most likely the title, headlines, links and anchor text are examined. It's possible that external anchor text pointing to that page has also been pre-collected and is available for scanning, but this is much less likely. (Besides, external links are not something within your immediate control, so don't worry about it right now.)

3. You want to find out which keywords that are relevant to your site are in Google's dictionary. Compile as many relevant keywords you can think of that searchers might use to find your site. Now take these words singly and in pairs, according to how users might search. Run two searches for each combination and compare the results.

4. If the results are strikingly different for the pre-filter and the post-filter search on a particular term or combination of terms, it means that some variation of those terms has been flagged because something was found in Google's dictionary.

5. Do lots of searches and you can come up with a list of "sensitive" words that you'll want to avoid when you re-optimize your pages.

It's a nice weekend project.

allanp73

3:10 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



If the update is over then I feel a lot of people are in trouble. I deal in an industry which based on "city keyword" searches, so I look at the rankings for hundred of cities across North America. I know who my competition is. After this update not only have my sites disappeared, but many of competitors sites have disappeared for the term "city keyword".
Here is the type of optimization I did:
1) H1 "city keyword1 keyword2" (company name)
2) Text "city keyword1" with a density of 15%
3) Mixed in text one link to content "city keyword1"
4) Copyright link at bottom "city keyword1 keyword2" (company name) links to index page
5) Meta title "city keyword1 keyword2" - city keyword3 keyword4

These sites had about 300-400 of excellent content related to "city keyword". No spam technics were used. I can say that my competitors had a pretty similar set up and even-though they are my competitors I must be honest and say they also had excellent content and didn't spam.

Now that these sites are removed the first two pages of serps are dominated by not related to industry sites. Mainly sites which library, newspaper, university, or radio sites that may be mention once or link to a "city keyword1" site. This could imply that pr is becoming a dominate ranking element.

I personally believe Google is filtering optimized pages. The problem I see with doing this is sites that are optimized are generally very relevent and usually have excellent related content. SEO is not a bad thing we (the SEO and search engine) are both working for the same goals. It is a shame that Google does this so close to Chirstmas. I imagine thousands of site owners will be affected.

LogicMan

3:20 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



allanp73 said >> This could imply that pr is becoming a dominate ranking element.

I'm seeing exactly the opposite.

Tha't what is so confusing about this update, every theory can be disproved by another set of keywords.

In my main keyword phrase
PR1's (I never knew that there was such a thing) are in top 20 of a very competitive category that used to be dominated by PR5 - 6's and an occassional PR4 but never below PR4. Now, in the top 20 results there are 2 PR1s, 2 PR2s, 4 PR3s, 10 PR4s, 1 PR5 and 1 PR6.

superscript

3:23 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)



I've been following this thread, and I'm not convinced about this 'commercial sites filtered out' theory. On my important KW1 KW2 the top 9 are commercial sites, the tenth informational. But for some reason my site is suddenly knowhere to be found.

If the cause is 'over optimisation' - well, we're smart people - smart enough to de-optimise!

I think maybe it is a second update - and we're just going through the nonsense stage again.

<edit: clarification: by 'nonsense' I don't mean the contents of this thread - I mean Google throwing up nonsense! >

[edited by: superscript at 3:26 pm (utc) on Nov. 22, 2003]

agent10

3:23 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Since the change yesterday in -va all our sites that have been launched over the last couple of months have just vanished, yet ranked very well in -va until today, so the theories of google using old data at present imo is correct.

All our sites are full of content 100's of pages each, all different content and different catagories. Our thoughts were that -va was in fact using a content algo of some sort since we and other competitors ranked well if site contained pages of content.

Another thought too is that google obviously monitors this forum, why not in future before going live don't they use 1 particular datacentre and use our feedback first, isn't that called brainstorming, and in fact using many more people than you could fit in a room! With anything especially on this scale some factors get missed or not thought of, and with the diversity of site builds and seo techniques some algo factors as can be seen do not work when used so generally.

chinook

3:44 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



One more thing on this AI theory, look at:
[webmasterworld.com...]
Much of the discussion revolves around keyword pairs which is very much the center of this update.

Also the other piece is the idea of rules. Up till now Google has had defined rules & filters etc that have been pretty much deciphered by the SEO community. If you view this update as not having rules it certainly seems to make more sense.

seofreak

3:48 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



this must be officially the biggest thread ever.

GregR

3:53 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



When a behemoth like Google decided that backlinks are king, I saw an improvement in the Internet as a whole. Suddenly the webmaster that had been providing excellent content to masses but losing money in the process found a revenue stream. All you SEO guys started contacting these webmasters waving wads of cash before their eyes. Now the webmaster has an incentive to add more excellent content to his site and get paid for his hard work.

Google give me back my money keyword backlinks that I paid dearly for or stop encouraging SEO people to get inbound links.

The nice thing about this being a filter is all Google has to do is flip a switch and everything goes back to normal.

egomaniac

4:00 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



This update is still churning.

One of my 3 index pages has improved its ranking somewhat after getting hammered last weekend by Florida. Up until last week, I was regularly ranked at #3,4, or 5 for my index page's target keyword (for 9+ mos). For most of the last week, my page has been down around 460 or so since Florida started. This morning it is about about 250, and the top 10 looked very different than the past few days.

Another index page for a subdomain is showing similar results. Last week, #3. Most of this past week since Flordia around 250, today it is about 180, and the top 10 are very different.

lgn1

4:02 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



A lot of shopping sites are using dynamic content, that
does not always index well, or at all in Google, depending
on the complexity of the url string.

If google is judging a keyword combo, by the entire site
and not by a single page, that may explain why so many
ecomm sites are dropping like a rock.

willybfriendly

4:24 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



"I am seeing tiny sites falling. i.e. sites with fewer than, say, 20 pages. "

Look around then. Our main site with around 200 pages was hammered. A smaller site with around 15 kept its position

You know what replaced our main site? A one page site with the search term in its title and H1 and no content but Adsense ads!

I am not convinced that we are looking at a dictionary (lacks the elegance that Google likes so much), but there is certainly something. Great discussions now that all the whining is gone away.

WBF

iJeep

4:36 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



It doesn't look like the update is over. Only about 1/3 or less of my backlinks are showing. It seems to be this way with my competitors too.

I don't think the size of the site has to do with anything. I have about 6000 pages and fell 10 pages from the front.

mrguy

4:43 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I’ve stayed away from the update thread until now since there are lot of different theories being presented.

One thing I have seen that is consistent for many different searches is that the results exactly match the directory results if there are any for that given term. This has been mentioned but not really talked about.

If this is the new way they are blending the algo with directory then think of the ramifications. They only dump the DMOZ results a couple times a year lately. So, now it can take six months or longer to get a site listed if you can get it in DMOZ.

Yahoo does the same thing now. When searching there they replace the title tag with their directory listing if you’re in it. I feel this will play a much bigger role once Ink is incorporated thus giving value back to paying to be in their directory.

If Google has decided to put their future in DMOZ, it is a slippery slope. DMOZ is rife with corrupt editors. When you get spam from a DMOZ editor telling you their position there can help yours in Google, then there is a huge problem.

I can only hope this is some sort of algo test for Google and they don’t go solely on their directory listings. If they do, they will not be as strong a player as they have been in the past.

That’s my one update thread post. Back to lurking.

sandalwood

4:45 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Except -va, has anybody noticed changes in backlinks in another dc?

customdy

5:20 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I de-optimised our keyword1 keyword2 phrase that our index page has taken a major hit. We make the changes about 3 days ago. The pages ranks #2 for keyword1 keyword2 - wqwqzw post florida and ranked #2 for keyword1 keyword2 pre-florida.

We removed keyword1 keyword2 from the Title, from the H1, and reduced the page density down significantly, only repeated this phrase once on the index page (<5%). Googlebot visited us and today we are showing fresh results with NO improvement in SERPs.

We have only 3 external links to the site that use keyword1 keyword2 in them.. The index page has a PR4.

WebBender

5:26 pm on Nov 22, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



steveb,

And for the first time in a year, from a strictly seo point of view, the thing to do now is not get more and more links links links, the thing to do is to get more and more content on pages.

It's all perspective- but this does not seem the case across the board. Adding content has always been an SEO mantra around here.

I get the gist of what you are stating. I can see 'informational' sites getting a boost in more generic, broad phrases like keyword1 keyword2, but [b]not[/b/] under something like 'industry name company'. <-- That has happened in my little neck of the woods. Luckily the OV CTR has been excellent.

WB

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