SEO: Google's Next Big
Move
By David
Leonhardt
(Will your website
be ready, or will you be playing catch-up six
months too late? November 2003 might
go down in history as the month that Google shook
a lot of smug webmasters and search engine optimization
(SEO) specialists from the apple tree. But more
than likely, it was just a precursor of the BIG
shakeup to come. Google touts highly its secret
PageRank algorithm. Although PageRank is just
one factor in choosing what sites appear on a
specific search, it is the main way that Google
determines the "importance" of a website. In
recent months, SEO specialists have become expert
at manipulating PageRank, particularly through
link exchanges. There is nothing wrong with links.
They make the Web a web rather than a series
of isolated islands. However, PageRank relies
on the naturally "democratic" nature of the web,
whereby webmasters link to sites they feel are
important for their visitors. Google rightly
sees link exchanges designed to boost PageRank
as stuffing the ballot box. I was not surprised
to see Google try to counter all the SEO efforts.
In fact, I have been arguing the case with many
non-believing SEO specialists over the past couple
months. But I was surprised to see the clumsy
way in which Google chose to do it. Google targeted
specific search terms, including many of the
most competitive and commercial terms. Many websites
lost top positions in five or six terms, but
maintain their positions in several others. This
had never happened before. Give credit to Barry
Lloyd of SearchEngineGuide.com for cleverly
uncovering the process. For Google, this shakeup
is just a temporary fix. It will have to make
much bigger changes if it is serious about harnessing
the "democratic" nature of the Web and neutralizing
the artificial results of so many link exchanges.
Here are a few techniques Google might use (remember
to think like a search engine):
- Google might start
valuing inbound links within paragraphs much higher
than links that stand on their own. (For all we
know, Google is already doing this.) Such links
are much less likely to be the product of a link
exchange, and therefore more likely to be genuine "democratic" votes.
Google might look
at the concentration of inbound links across a
website. If most inbound links point to the home
page, that is another possible indicator of a link
exchange, or at least that the site's content is
not important enough to draw inbound links (and
it is content that Google wants to deliver to its
searchers).
Google might take
a sample of inbound links to a domain, and check
to see how many are reciprocated back to the linking
domains. If a high percentage are reciprocated,
Google might reduce the site's PageRank accordingly.
Or it might set a cut-point, dropping from its
index any website with too many of its inbound
links reciprocated.
Google might start
valuing outbound links more highly. Two pages with
100 inbound links are, in theory, valued equally,
even if one has 20 outbound links and the other
has none. But why should Google send its searchers
down a dead-end street, when the information highway
is paved just as smoothly on a major thoroughfare?
- Google might weigh
a website's outbound link concentration. A website
with most outbound links concentrated on just a
few pages is more likely to be a "link-exchanger" than
a site with links spread out across its pages.
Google might use a combination
of these techniques and ones not mentioned here.
We cannot predict the exact algorithm, nor can we
assume that it will remain constant. What we can
do is to prepare our websites to look and act like
a website would on a "democratic" Web as Google would
see it. For Google to hold its own against upstart
search engines, it must deliver on its PageRank promise.
Its results reflect the "democratic" nature of the
Web. Its algorithm must prod webmasters to give links
on their own merit. That won't be easy or even completely
possible. And people will always find ways to turn
Google's algorithm to their advantage. But the techniques
above can send the Internet a long way back to where
Google promises it will be.
The time is now to start
preparing your website for the changes to come.
|
|