If you are one to pay attention to
what happens within the Google realm, you might find
yourself thrown for a loop these days. As Google updates
their results, it seems like they are having some issues
dealing with so many new websites popping up.
Indexing 8 billion websites is quite an accomplishment
for Google. As they are reluctant to increase this number,
they are faced with many challenges in trying to keep
some sites within these 8 billion pages while losing
some others, after each update they do to their database.
So how do you determine which listings to lose?
We've all heard of the 'sandbox theory'! (New sites
are added to a group of other new sites until a certain
amount of time has passed and you've proven your worth.
Once you've proven your site is valuable, Google releases
it within its regular search results).
It seems to me that if you don't own a large network
of websites that can easily increase the websites link
popularity overnight, your newly created website won't
get hit as hard and is added to the sandbox for only
a certain period of time.
On the other hand, if you do own a large network of
websites and increase the amount of websites you have,
your newly built website(s) will get hit harder and
may take a lot more time and promotional effort to get
good search rankings results within Google.
Let's take a look at why this may be true:
1) It has been long speculated that
Google searches through the 'WHOIS' data base regularly
('WHOIS' - Contact record of who owns a specific domain
name). By doing this Google can now see who owns what
and how many domain names they own. By doing this Google
can now determine that 'Company A' owns 25 websites.
This collection of 25 websites can now all be crawled
to look for content copying, ghost pages, mimic pages,
irrelevant link directories, etc. By knowing that you
own 25 websites, Google can quickly determine their
worth and rank them accordingly.
2) With this knowledge provided by
the 'WHOIS' data base, Google can also see how many
years you've registered each domain name for. For instance,
if you register all your domain names for only 1 year,
there is a possibility that you don't plan on using
these domain names for the long term. Instead, you may
be using these new domain names simply to keep up with
new changes on the internet and new standards in search
engine optimization.
On the other hand, if you register all of your new domain
names for the next 5 years, it is more likely that you
are going to use these domain names in the future. This
now gives more relevance to each domain name you register
for more than 1 year.
I am now recommending to all my clients not only to
make sure to register a domain name related to their
country (i.e. Canada = .ca), but to also make sure that
they register their domain name for 5 years. If you
are truly serious about increasing your business online,
why would you risk missing your domain name renewals
every year and possibly loose your domain name?
Google may also look at how long you've owned this website
for!
It may be true that by adding your new website to the
'sandbox', Google may also add your website to a 'history
report'. This history report can give their database
detailed information about how old your website is.
These days, I believe that it takes about 6-8 months
before Google updates your 'history report'. By updating,
I mean possibly releasing your website further within
search results.
See, this combination of 'who owns the domain', 'how
long will you own the domain name', and 'how old is
the website', can provide a more accurate report to
Google as to whether or not this website will survive,
stay the course, or provide great content. Through this
'history report' and 'sandbox report', your website
will go through an 'exam' after 6-8 months in order
to determine whether or not you are ready to play with
the big boys online or whether or not your website has
what it takes to succeed online.
Until Google increases the amount of websites it will
index within its results, we are all going to have to
battle to stay on top. Internet marketing in general
is becoming increasingly tougher with every month that
passes. It has finally caught up to us and we are now
starting to fight a hard battle.
One more thing you may notice:
Google's cache (Snapshot image of your website when
it crawls through) is becoming a little wonky lately.
One day Google will have an updated cache, the next
day it won't have a cache at all, and the following
day it will have a cache of your website from 2 weeks
ago.
What does this all mean?
When Google crawls a certain page, it looks at everything.
Let’s take one specific internal page in your website.
This specific page may be ranked 10 different times
within the search results for 10 different key searches
depending on the content within that certain page.
As Google increasingly fights to keep certain pages,
its cache may be having a tough time keeping up and
delivering the most relevant cache to date. More times
than not, the front page of a website doesn't have a
cache at all anymore! This is very interesting. It may
mean that your front page may not be the 'key' anymore
since more and more people are trying to cram everything
under the sun within their front page.
It is possible that your 'Main Sub-Categories' are weighing
higher in Google's eyes for the quality and relevance
of your internal content.
What you want to do is to provide a clean map to all
your internal pages. Your front page was the best solution
for providing a map to all of your pages. Maybe these
days, your front page should be used only to link to
your main 'sub-categories' and also to show your most
recent posted content!
I will leave you with this. If you are new online or
even an experienced marketer online, buying many new
domain names may not be the key to increase your success
right now. Buying new domains should be a long term
investment. Try increasing the popularity of your already
established websites in order to gain more exposure
for your business. Owning more domains increases the
amount of time and effort you need to promote each one.
Like I've mentioned many times before, owning a network
of websites is not enough! You need to expand your horizons
online, increase your content and create more business
partnerships every chance you have.
About The Author: Martin Lemieux
- is the president of the Smartads Advertising Network.
Smartads is here to help your business grow online and
offline.
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