Showing posts with label Google Webmaster Central. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google Webmaster Central. Show all posts

How Important is the Speed of Your Site?

How Important is the Speed of Your Site?. Late last year, in a conversation about the Caffeine update, Google's Matt Cutts told WebProNews that page speed could become a factor Google looks at for ranking search results. His comments received a lot of attention, because Google has never taken this into consideration for ranking websites in the past.

The notion that they would do so riled a lot of people up, because a lot of site owners out there simply don't have incredibly fast sites. That could pose a big problem if it suddenly damages their search rankings.

Despite the fact that Cutts never said that page speed would become any more important of a ranking factor than anything else, many around the web and Blogosphere jumped to conclusions. While many more have remained sensible about the concept, not expecting page speed to trump relevant content, Cutts has now provided a video setting the record straight. The video is a response to the following user-submitted question:

Since we're hearing a lot of talk about the implications of Page Speed, I wonder if Google still cares as much about relevancy? Or are recentness and page load time more important?

Matt's answer is simply, "No. Relevancy is the most important. If you have two sites that are equally relevant (same backlinks...everything else is the same), you'd probably prefer the one that's a little bit faster, so page speed can be an interesting theory to try out for a factor in scoring different websites. But absolutely, relevance is the primary component, and we have over 200 signals in our scoring to try to return the most relevant, the most useful, the most accurate search result that we can find. That's not going to change." (emphasis added)


Is speed more important than relevance?


"If you can speed your site up, it's really good for users, as well as potentially down the road, being good for search engines," he says. "So it's something that people within Google have thought about."

It is interesting that anyone would ever assume page speed would become more important than relevance to Google, just because Matt Cutts indicated that page speed may become one of the many factors Google uses. If it were more important than relevance, Google probably would have been placing emphasis on page speed for a long time.

That said, it is worth pondering just how big a factor page speed would play. If there are over 200 factors, where would page speed be placed within the ranking of ranking factors? On a scale of one to two hundred, where would Google rank the importance of page speed? That question might not be quite so easy to answer, particularly since Google isn't real keen on the idea of giving away its secrets, and frankly, that's probably in the best interest of the web.

Just as with any other SEO tactic, it is up to individuals and the industry at large to speculate, analyze, and test. It's no easy feat, but there are plenty of educated guesses out there about just what Google's "over 200 ranking factors" are. Once you get into how much weight each one carries, it gets even more difficult to speculate.

I think the real takeaway here is simply to make your site as fast and user-friendly as possible, within reason. If it means you have to spend less time producing relevant content that is likely to get you good search engine placement, then maybe it's not worth it. However, if it means providing a better user experience on top of relevant content, and it's within your means to do so, it will only have good implications for the future of your site.

Google offers webmasters a lot of different tools to help them make their sites faster. In fact, they have a list of such tools here, and it doesn't just contain Google tools. They also point to tools from third-party developers. It's all part of Google's initiative to "make the web faster." ( webpronews.com )

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Google Ditches PageRank in Webmaster Tools

Google Ditches PageRank in Webmaster Tools. Google has quietly gotten rid of PageRank in Webmaster Tools. Barry Schwartz at Search Engine Roundtable points to a thread featuring an explanation from Google Webmaster Trends Analyst Susan Moskwa.

"We've been telling people for a long time that they shouldn't focus on PageRank so much; many site owners seem to think it's the most important metric for them to track, which is simply not true," says Moskwa. "We removed it because we felt it was silly to tell people not to think about it, but then to show them the data, implying that they should look at it."

Barry Schwartz Search marketers are wondering why Google tells people not to focus on PageRank and removes it from Webmaster Tools, but still keeps it in the Google Toolbar. "Back in 2007, Google wanted feedback on removing PageRank from the Toolbar," says Schwartz. "I felt it was a good idea but the idea died out. Google cannot remove PageRank from the Toolbar, it is too much of their branding. No matter how much Matt Cutts and the Google search quality and webmaster trends team want it removed, I cannot see Google's executives allowing it."

Andy Beal of Marketing Pilgrim says the role of PageRank has been reduced to nothing more than a "comfort blanket for SEO Noobs." He adds, "I say this, with a high degree of confidence that most experienced SEOs pour over the data in Google Webmaster Tools, whereas those new to the industry likely let the toolbar be their only guiding light."

He also notes, however, that PageRank data can still be useful. For example, it can be a good indicator of a site's behavior in Google's index. "Any green means 'go.' No green, means there's something to investigate," says Beal.

Despite this usefulness though, Moskwa pretty much closes the case on Google's position on it. In fact, she even points to a FAQ page about crawling, indexing, and ranking, which says that webmasters shouldn't even bother thinking about it. It also says that PageRank is just one of over 200 signals that can affect how your site is crawled, indexed, and ranked.

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Google is not currently penalizing paid javascript links

Google is not currently penalizing paid javascript links. You may recall back at SMX Seattle earlier this year, Google's Matt Cutts talked at length about paid links. He touched upon the topic of Google being able to read javascript after giving out advice for so long to use javascript as a way to keep Google from reading paid links.

When asked about this, Matt said Googlebot had gotten smarter. He noted that Google began changing its messaging on the subject around 2007-2008 to stop mentioning javascript but to nofollow or do a redirect through a URL which is blocked through robots.txt.

Cutts noted that even on the onclick in javascript, the crawl and indexing team had submitted code so that it would respect a rel="nofollow". So you can put a rel="nofollow" attribute on a link that's running in javascript, and more often than not, Google will make sure it doesn't flow pagerank even if they're executing the javascript.

Cutts did say, however, that if you want to be completely safe, to nofollow or link through things that are blocked.

Cutts revisited the topic in a recent upload to the Google Webmaster Central YouTube channel, in response to the following user question:

Now that Google can crawl JavaScript links, what is going to happen with all those paid links that were behind JavScript code? Will Google start penalizing them?

Matt reiterated that Google has gotten better at crawling javascript, and that URLs you put into javascript that you didn't think would be crawled, might now possibly be crawled and indexed. He says the vast majority of people who do javascript links are ad networks and that Google handles these very well.

He then reiterated the use of nofollow, even within the javascript code, and the use of robots.txt to block out URls, and redirects.

"We find that the vast majority of paid links are typically not done with javascript," says Cutts. "They're typically completely straight text links. so that's where we've been spending the vast majority of our time."

Cutts says that Google is not currently penalizing paid javascript links, but they may start looking down the line. He says it hasn't been a big issue at all in his experience though.

"If you're selling text links, just make sure they don't flow page rank and they don’t effect search engines," he says.

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Consigue tu sitio indexadas en 24 horas

Consigue tu sitio indexadas en 24 horas. La mayoría de la SEO le asesorará para comprar un sitio / dominio (lotes de vejez), pero hay momentos en que necesita para empezar desde cero con un nuevo dominio.

A veces puede tardar un par de semanas para obtener un nuevo dominio indexadas por Google (incluso más en iniciar la clasificación). Con el fin de acelerar el proceso de obtener su sitio indexado rápidamente, incluso en 24 horas, siga los pasos que se indican a continuación:

1) Creación de 5 páginas de contenido

Saltar el "en construcción" la página y escribir varias páginas de contenido real, por lo menos unos pocos párrafos.

2) Crear los enlaces internos a sus páginas

Coloque el contenido en una plantilla con una estructura de menús para hacer más fácil este paso. Usted puede encontrar plantillas gratuitas oswd.org y en otros lugares, al menos para empezar. Enlace al contenido a través del menú, y si usted tiene una importante página de destino, de enlace con el contenido de una página o dos.

3) Etiqueta en los sitios bookmarking sociales en

Después de tan sólo unos minutos para crear una cuenta con estos sitios, puede enviar un enlace a su sitio. Esto le da una forma instantánea de Google y otros motores de búsqueda para encontrar su sitio porque estos sitios bookmarking sociales en obtener visitados por el motor de búsqueda de los robots (como Googlebot) bastante regular. Unos pocos sitios bookmarking recomendar: Del.icio.us, BlinkList, StumbleUpon.com,. Asegúrese de que la etiqueta con las palabras comunes, como los que usted encuentra en su etiqueta las nubes (BlinkList has a good one, desplácese hacia abajo justo en la página para verlo).

4) Comentario sobre los blogs populares y recientes (con su link)

Encuentra 5 blogs que son bastante populares, correspondiente a su sitio web, y tener un blog reciente (último día o dos). Leer el correo y añadir un comentario que contribuye a la discusión, la inclusión de un enlace a su sitio en el campo de URL.

5) Crear, Enviar, Ping y su Sitemap en XML

Usted puede crear un free XML sitemap here aquí luego cargar el archivo a su sitio web (sólo guardarlo como sitemap.xml). Luego de ping con su mapa de sitio Google escribiendo la siguiente dirección URL en su navegador, en sustitución del nombre de dominio con su propio:

http://google.com/webmasters/sitemaps/ping?sitemap=http://www.mysite.com/sitemap.xml

A continuación, crear una cuenta con Google Webmaster Central, añadir su sitio web, y enviar su mapa de sitio XML.

6) Instalación de Google Analytics

Añadir Google Analytics (gratuito) a su sitio. No se olvide de verificar el sitio con ellos para obtener la recopilación de datos iniciado.

7) Ejecutar algunos anuncios de Google

Crear una cuenta en Google Adwords y empezar a correr algunos anuncios, incluso si sólo por su nombre de dominio, el nombre de la empresa, o algunas palabras clave larga cola. Google tiene que ir a su sitio por su nivel de calidad, que incluye "la calidad de la página". Simplemente pasar un par de dólares y puede ayudar a reactivar la indexación.

Con estos pasos, debería ver su sitio indexado con bastante rapidez. No puedo garantizar la 24 horas, pero es posible. Por lo menos que acelerar la indexación de forma significativa (de semanas a días). Busque el "googlebot" para visitar en su sitio de análisis. A continuación, busque su sitio aparezca en Google al hacer una búsqueda con el operador site: (por ejemplo, el sitio: site:sphinn.com). Disfrutar!

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Get Your Site Indexed in 24 hours

Get Your Site Indexed in 24 hours. Most SEO’s will advise you to buy an existing site/domain (lots of age benefit), but there are times when you need to start from scratch with a fresh domain.

It can sometimes take a couple of weeks to get a new domain indexed by Google (even longer to start ranking!). In order to speed up the process of getting your site indexed quickly, even in 24 hours, follow the steps outlined below:

1) Create 5 pages of content

Skip the “under construction” page and write several pages of real content, at least a few paragraphs.

2) Create Internal Links to your Pages

Put the content in a template with a menu structure to make this step easier. You can find free templates at oswd.org and other places, at least to get started. Link to the content through the menu, and if you have a major landing page, link to it from the content of a page or two.

3) Tag on Social Bookmarking Sites

After just a few minutes to create an account with these sites you can submit a link to your site. This gives you an instant way for Google and other search engines to find your site because these social bookmarking sites get visited by the search engine bots (like the Googlebot) quite regularly. A few bookmarking sites to recommend: Del.icio.us, BlinkList, StumbleUpon.com, and Furl. Make sure you tag them with common words, like those you find on their tag clouds (BlinkList has a good one, just scroll down on the page to see it).

4) Comment on popular and recent blogs (with your link)

Find 5 blogs that are fairly popular, relevant to your site, and have a recent blog post (last day or two). Read the post and add a comment that contributes to the discussion, including a link to your site in the URL field.

5) Create, Submit, and Ping your XML Sitemap

You can create a free XML sitemap here then upload the file to your site (just save it as sitemap.xml). Then ping Google with your sitemap by typing in the following URL in your browser, replacing the domain name with your own:

http://google.com/webmasters/sitemaps/ping?sitemap=http://www.mysite.com/sitemap.xml

Next, create an account with Google Webmaster Central, add your site, and submit your XML sitemap.

6) Install Google Analytics

Add Google Analytics (free) to your site. Don’t forget to verify your site with them to get the data collection started.

7) Run some Google Ads

Create an account with Google Adwords and start running some ads, even if its just for the domain name, company name, or some long tail keywords. Google has to go to your site because of their quality score, which includes “your landing page quality”. Just spend a couple of bucks and it can help jumpstart the indexing.

With these steps, you should see your site indexed fairly quickly. I can’t guarantee the 24 hours, but it is possible. At the very least it will speed up the indexing significantly (from weeks to days). Look for the “googlebot” to visit in your site analytics. Then look for your site to show up with Google by doing a search with the site: operator (for example, site:sphinn.com). Enjoy!
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