Read WebProNews
With Friends!

Google’s Need For Freshness Sours Search Results

Link velocity a clue to gaming search

Get the WebProNews Newsletter!
Top Rated White Papers and Resources
There are 43 Comments. Add Yours.
  1. Yeah, I think inbound links have far too much weight in Google’s algorithm….and finally everyone has figured it out! This day was sure to come.

  2. Could Google be looking at link bursts also as a way of interpreting social bookmarking whitehat internal links as positive indicators?

    Most sites like Digg have changed their link structure so there is no more argument on whether or not Google finds links there of value, especially after the spammers got hold of them.

    But could Google be also finding relevance in social bookmarks, when the voting is so great that it cannot be the result of manipulation? Like the Digg front page?

    This would allow Google to find good fresh content, depending on the number of votes a parent blog got and Google can determine the voting on these social sites because each vote creates an outgoing link from each profile to the internal story, so it is followable.

    Also think Twitter, you can’t send garbage and have it go viral, to get retweeted you have to have something to offer. Forget nofollow, it does not matter, just think if Google used social voting as a link burst indicator….

    Just my two cents and a question for you more skilled SEO guys.

  3. Thanks for the info. You can certainly drive yourself crazy trying to figure out what to do in response to Google’s latest algorithm change. One thing’s for sure though. PageRank set Google apart from the crowd and they aren’t going to drop it. Their job now is to sort out the good links from the bad links. When you are link building, you know what is a good link and what is a bad link. Get good, useful incoming links, but more than that, don’t screw up your pages chasing the algorithm so much that they don’t convert.

  4. This is interesting, cause I had always been taught that building links TOO fast would result in your site getting ranked lower. Guess times have changed. It will be interesting to see how Google responds.

  5. We will be adding News for fresh daily content but it’s too bad that archival content such as museum quality art is getting battered by daily social bleeps & “for the moment” information. We’ve just kept adding since 1995 instead of changing so if you want to see a “web site museum” take a look at TheHamptons.com – it’s become “a monument” of original design and original content with new content layered on top. Back in the day, the concept was about layers of information. We’re moving towards redesign but for now it’s kind of cool that we might be able to grab the award for the oldest site design on the web ; ) We were #1 till 3 weeks ago for search term “the hamptons” and just dropped to below Google’s own ads for local business links as a result of the latest algorithm tweak. HOWEVER the archival & fresh mix WAS working for 14 years. Seems to me like google is reaping the rewards from everyone else’s content and not giving back much for it. just my take…

  6. very usefull information.. great

What do you think? Respond.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>