Content
19 February 2007, 02:16
Matt Cutts talks about SEO traps
The head of Google's anti-spam team
Matt Cutts publicly reviewed some web sites
has drawn the conclusion.
Matt Cutts said "Old methods of
web-work at new innovations of search systems
have ceased to operate, but till now are actively used by web-masters, that only
lowers ranking their sites"
Some statements in these public reviews might help you to improve your
rankings on Google and Yahoo.
Duplicate content can create problems
One of the web sites that Matt Cutts analyzed had a problem with duplicate
content. The owner of the web site had more than 20 other web sites that offered
overlapping content and overlapping pages on different URLs.
Search engines can find out which other web sites belong to you. For example,
Alexa shows the different domains that a webmaster owns.
In addition, the web site used the same meta description tag on dozens of pages.
This can cause problems with search engines.
Matt Cutts suggests to vary the pages by adding user comments or reviews. He
said that varying the duplicate pages by adding a few extra sentences or by
scrambling a few words wouldn't work.
Very big sitemaps can cause problems
Another
web site did fine in Google but it couldn't get high rankings on Yahoo.
The site had a very large sitemap-type page that listed hundreds of articles on
one page. This could trigger the filters of some search engines. Matt Cutts
suggested to split the sitemap into smaller pages.
You should use the correct letter case in sitemap files
The same site might had problems with Yahoo because there was a mismatch between
the uppercase URL titles on the live pages and the lowercase URL titles
according to Yahoo's Site Explorer. That might trigger cloaking filters.
You should focus on
quality back links
If inbound links are built too quickly, they don't have a positive effect on the
link rankings of a web site (details can be found here).
Reciprocal links should be from related sites that have something in common with
your own web site. Reciprocal links with unrelated sites don't help. Many
webmasters are unsure if too many links can hurt their web site rankings. Others
think that links to a brand-new site might be a spam indicator. How many links
are good for a web site? Should you wait before getting links to your site?
Too many links? What's the problem?
It's no secret that Google heavily relies on the number of links and their
anchor texts to determine the ranking of a web site. However, Google's recently
filed patent indicates that Google might also use historical information to
determine the value of links.
Google reveals the details
The patent specification indicates that Google might record the discovery date
of a link and its anchor text and the link changes over time. Google might also
record the life span of a link and the speed at which a new web site gets links.
Google also seems to monitor the rate at which new links to a web page appear
and disappear. They also monitor the growth rates of links as well as the link
growth of similar documents.
What does this mean to you?
Google doesn't expect that new web sites have a large number of links. If a new
web site gets many new links, this will be tolerated if some of the links are
from authorative sites.
Google's patent specification indicates that it is better if link growth remains
constant and slow. You should vary your anchor texts as much as possible to make
sure that your links look natural. Burst link growth may be a strong indicator
of search engine spam for Google.
How to build links to your web site without getting penalized
You shouldn't go for one-shot solutions when building links to your site. If you
participate in quick link exchange schemes or buy links to your web site so that
you get many links at once, changes are that Google will consider this spamming.
When you
exchange links with other web sites, do it slowly and constantly.
Invest some time every week to build the links to your site and vary the texts
that point to your site. Make sure that the links to your site contain keywords
that are related to your site and vary the link texts.
Avoid session IDs if possible
Matt Cutts indicated that it
makes sense not to use URLs with session IDs. Long URLs with many variables
can cause problems with search engine spiders. This is also mentioned in the
Google guidelines:
"If fancy features such as
JavaScript, cookies, session IDs, frames, DHTML, or Flash keep you from
seeing all of your site in a text browser, then search engine
spiders may have trouble crawling your site."
Having too many web sites and private WHOIS might hurt
your rankings
Matt Cutts indicated that it might hurt your rankings if you have too
many sites and if you use these web sites just to display PPC ads:
"Having lots of sites isn’t automatically bad, and having PPC sites
isn’t automatically bad, and having whois privacy turned on isn’t
automatically bad, but once you get several of these factors all together,
you’re often talking about a very different type of webmaster than the
fellow who just has a single site or so."
If you try to cheat Google then it's likely that one of Google's filters will
apply to your web site sooner or later.
Your web site should be useful and interesting to web surfers. If you have
such a web site, make sure that there are no technical errors that prevent
search engines from indexing your web pages.
Copyright © 2007 Stakh SEO Íîâîñòè
Google Page
www.vroum.fr
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