Google & The Future of Search
Engine Optimization - News Dallas, Fort Worth
Jagger, Google Analytics, and
the Future of Search & SEO
Author: Glenn Murray
Two big things have just happened in Google-land: Jagger and
Google Analytics. Together, these two events may have
changed the face of search forever.
Jagger
First, let's discuss Jagger... Just like hurricanes,
Google updates have names. (A Google update is a change to
the way Google determines its rankings. Google makes these
changes periodically, and they're universally feared because
they can impact dramatically on a website's ranking.) The
latest update is called Jagger, and it has search engine
optimizers (SEOs) all around the world in a state of panic.
Why was Jagger such a fearful update? Simple... With
Jagger, Google once again outsmarted huge numbers of SEOs.
You see, many/most SEOs spend their time (and their clients'
money) trying to trick Google into thinking that their
websites are more relevant and important than they really
are. They do this mostly by swapping links, buying cheap
links, and placing links on free directories. While there's
nothing wrong with these sorts of links (i.e. they're not
considered 'black-hat'), they don't really show that the
site is relevant or important. All they really show is that
the site owner has made a deal with another site owner. In
these deals, the incentive for the linking site owner is a
reciprocal link, money, or increased link volume. Google
much prefers it when the linking site adds the link simply
to enhance the value of their content or to increase their
own credibility and authority.
In other words, Google wants its search results to
contain relevant, important sites, not sites that merely
appear to be relevant and important. To this end, Google
invests millions of dollars and employs the world's smartest
mathematicians to create algorithms which identify sites
that are trying to trick them. And that's exactly what
Jagger did; and when it found those sites, it simply
adjusted their ranking to more accurately reflect their true
importance. (Unfortunately, it also demoted some sites which
actually deserve a high ranking. It is hoped that these
mistakes will be ironed out with future minor updates, but
that's a topic for another article...)
From a technical standpoint, Jagger was well described by
Ken Webster in his article,
Google's Jagger Update - Dust Begins To Settle?. To
summarize, Jagger:
-
Increased importance placed on IBL (Inbound Links)
Relevancy?
-
Increased importance placed on OBL (Outbound Links)
Relevancy?
-
Promotion of relevant Niche Directories (related to #1
& #2)?
-
More weight thrown back to PR @ top domain?
-
Increased importance on AdSense placement relevancy?
-
Possible introduction of CSS Spam filtering?
-
Overall Blog demotions?
-
New and unresolved "canonical" issues?
Some more interesting effects were reported by WG Moore
in his Jagger article. Mr Moore runs a number of test sites for
SEO purposes. By monitoring the links to his test sites as
reported by Google, he established that:
"all reciprocal links had vanished. We think that this
is because Google is down-grading or eliminating
reciprocal links as a measure of popularity. This does
make sense, actually. Reciprocal links are a method of
falsifying popularity. Sort of a cheap method of buying a
link, if you want to think of it that way... During the
second week of the Jagger Update, a few of our reciprocal
links did come back up. However, we also noticed that
these were from places where we had highly relevant
content. They came from articles where we discussed our
area of expertise: Web Analytics, or from forums where we
had relevant threads. So we feel that these links came
back because of content, not linking.
The other group that came back up was one-way inbound text
links, regardless of the originating web site. These links
also had strong relevance to our web analytics business.
In other words, they contained keywords and/or phrases
related to our site and its business."
In short, Jagger undid the hard work of thousands - if
not millions - of people! As a result, hard-won high
rankings and revenues plummeted.
Interestingly,
article PR (article submission) came through Jagger
seemingly unscathed. My SEO
copywriting website, for example, went from no.4 to no.1
worldwide for "copywriter", and I've employed article PR
almost exclusively. Whether it was promoted or the sites
around it were demoted, one thing is clear: article PR is
one of the best ways to obtain a high ranking.
Google Analytics
The second monumental event to occur recently was Google Analytics. Google Analytics is a free web-stats
solution which not only reports all the regular site stats,
but also integrates directly with Google AdWords giving
webmasters and insight into the ROI of their pay-per-click
ads. According to Google, " Google Analytics tells you
everything you want to know about how your visitors found
you and how they interact with your site."
Why is this such a landmark move? Because for the first
time ever, Google will have access to your real web stats.
And these stats will be far more accurate than those
provided by Alexa. Furthermore, Google's privacy statement says: " We may also use
personal information for auditing, research and analysis to
operate and improve Google technologies and services." Now
let's put two and two together:
-
Google is 'giving' every webmaster in the world free
access to quality web-stats.
-
Millions of webmasters will accept this 'gift', if
only because it integrates directly with their Google
AdWords campaigns.
-
Google will then have full access to the actual web
stats of millions of commercial websites.
-
Google will have the right to use these stats to
develop new technologies.
-
What's the next logical step? Google will use these
statistics to help determine its rankings, of course!
It should come as no surprise. It's been on the cards -
and frequently discussed - for a long time. For example,
Jayde Online CEO, Mel Strocen, recently published an article
on this very topic,
The Future of WebSite Ranking. She quite rightly asserts
that:
"Google's "democratic" vision of the Web will never be
achieved by manipulating algorithm criteria based on
content. It will only be achieved by factoring in what is
important to people, and people will always remain the
best judge of what that is. The true challenge for search
engines in the future is how to incorporate web searcher
input and preferences into their ranking algorithms."
In fact, the Jayde Online network already owns and
operates a search engine, ExactSeek
which incorporates user popularity statistics in its
rankings.
The Future of Search & SEO
To date, ExactSeek is the only search engine which uses
visitor stats as criteria for its rankings. But Google isn't
far behind. We all know that Google specializes in taking a
good idea and implementing and adapting it brilliantly. This
is exactly what we'll see in this case. By combining link
popularity and user popularity statistics, Google will be
the only major search engine to consider both what other
sites think of your website and what your visitors think of
your website. And because they have the most advanced
algorithms for assessing link popularity, and will soon have
access to the farthest reaching, most accurate web stats to
assess user popularity, its competitors will be a long time
catching up.
So if that's the future of search, what's the future of
SEO? The future of SEO is undoubtedly one where:
-
one-way text links from relevant pages continue to be
the most valuable links
-
reciprocal linking continue to decline
-
the 'shotgun' approach to link buying declines
-
mass email link requests decline
-
free directory submission declines
-
niche directory submission increases
-
article PR (article submission) increases
-
article submission sites (e.g. EzineArticles, GoArticles, and ArticleBlast) play a much bigger and more important
role in helping online publishers locate quality articles
(due to the increasing article volume)
-
user popularity is just as important as link
popularity, which means:
-
the quality of article PR improves in order to
increase site traffic, credibility, and loyalty
-
the quality of website content improves in order to
convert traffic and encourage repeat visits
Clearly, the choices for SEOs will be pretty much limited
to paying for links at niche sites and/or engaging in
article PR. Being an SEO copywriter, I may be a little
biased, but for mine, article PR is the hands-down winner in
this comparison:
-
It satisfies Google's criteria for relevance and
importance. Linking site owners include your article and
link because, in doing so, their site becomes more useful
to visitors, and their business gains credibility and
authority.
-
It generates hundreds of free links quickly enough to
make it worth your while, but not so quickly as to raise
red flags at Google (in the form of link dampening).
-
Links are permanent and you don't have to pay to keep
them there.
-
You get a lot of qualified referred traffic who
already trust you and your expertise. This satisfies
Google's visitor popularity criteria, while at the same
time bringing you a lot of extra customers.
Conclusion
The lesson from Jagger is, don't try and trick Google!
They've got more money and more brains than virtually any
company in the world. It'll only end in tears! Don't spend
time and money trying to make your site look important and
relevant. Instead, spend that time and money actually making
it important and relevant! Content - the real content behind
the optimization - is the answer. After all, whether it's an
article or a web page, it's the content that keeps 'eyes on
paper', and that's what it's all about.
Happy optimizing!
* Glenn Murray is an SEO
copywriter,
advertising copywriter, and Article
Submission Specialist. He is a director of article
submission alternative, ArticlePR,
and also of
copywriting studio Divine Write. He can be contacted on
Sydney +612 4334 6222 or at glenn@divinewrite.com.
Visit
http://www.divinewrite.com or
http://www.ArticlePR.com for further details, more FREE
articles, or to download his free SEO e-book,
SEO Secrets.
This article is free for republishing
* Glenn Murray is an SEO
copywriter and article
submission and article PR specialist. He is a director
of article PR company ArticlePR
and also of copywriting studio Divine Write. He can be
contacted on Sydney +612 4334 6222 or at glenn@divinewrite.com.
Visit
www.divinewrite.com or www.ArticlePR.com for
further details, more FREE articles, or to purchase his
e-book, ‘SEO Secrets’. |