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Google Algorithm Update Analysis

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Dave Davies

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User since: October 10, 2004

Last login: January 07, 2008

Articles written: 5

Anybody who monitors their rankings with the same vigor that we in the SEO community do will have noticed some fairly dramatic shifts in the algorithm starting last Thursday (July 5th) and continuing through the weekend. Many sites are rocketing into the top 10 which, of course, means that many sites are being dropped at the same time. We were fortunate not to have any clients on the losing end of that equation however we have called and emailed the clients who saw sudden jumps into the top positions to warn them that further adjustments are coming. After a weekend of analysis there are some curiosities in the results that simply require further tweaks in the ranking system.

This update seems to have revolved around three main areas: domain age, backlinks and PageRank.

Domain Age

It appears that Google is presently giving a lot of weight to the age of a domain and, in this SEO's opinion, disproportionately so. While the age of a domain can definitely be used as a factor in determining how solid a company or site is, there are many newer sites that provide some great information and innovative ideas. Unfortunately a lot of these sites got spanked in the last update.

On this tangent I have to say that Google's use of domain age as a whole is a good filter, allowing them to “sandbox” sites on day one to insure that they aren't just being launched to rank quickly for terms. Recalling back to the “wild west days” of SEO when ranking a site was a matter of cramming keywords into content and using questionable methods to generate links quickly I can honestly say that adding in this delay was an excellent step that insured that the benefits of pumping out domains became extremely limited. So I approve of domain age being used to value a site – to a point.

After a period of time (let's call it a year shall we) the age should and generally has only had a very small influence on a site's ranking with the myriad of other factors overshadowing the site's whois data. This appears to have changed in the recent update with age holding a disproportionate weight. In a number of instances this has resulted in older, less qualified domains to rank higher than newer sites of higher quality.

This change in the ranking algorithm will most certainly be adjusted as Google works to maximize the searchers experience. We'll get into the “when” question below.

Backlinks

The way that backlinks are being calculated and valued has seen some adjustments in the latest update as well. The way this has been done takes me back a couple years to the more easily gamed Google of old. This statement alone reinforces the fact that adjustments are necessary.

The way backlinks are being valued appears to have lost some grasp on relevancy and placed more importance on sheer numbers. Sites with large, unfocused reciprocal link directories are outranking sites with fewer but more relevant link. Non-reciprocal links lost the “advantages” that they held over reciprocal links until recently.

Essentially the environment is currently such that Google has made itself more easily gamed than it was a week ago. In the current environment, building a reasonable sized site with a large recip link directory (even unfocused) should be enough to get you ranking. For obvious reasons this cannot (and should not) stand indefinitely.

PageRank

On the positive side of the equation, PageRank appears to have lost some of its importance including the importance of PageRank as it pertains to the value of a backlinks. In my opinion this is a very positive step on Google's part and shows a solid understanding of the fact that PageRank means little in terms of a site's importance. That said, while PageRank is a less than perfect calculation subject to much abuse and manipulation from those pesky people in the SEO community it did serve a purpose and while it needed to be replaced it doesn't appear to have been replaced with anything of substantial value.

A fairly common belief has been that PageRank would be or is being replaced by TrustRank and Google would not give us a green bar to gague a site's trust on (good call Google). With this in mind one of two things has happened; either Google has decided the TrustRank is irrelevant and so is PageRank and decided to scrap both (unlikely) or they have shifted the weight from PageRank to TrustRank to some degree and are just now sorting out the issues with their TrustRank calculations (more likely). Issues that may have existed with TrustRank may not have been clear due to it's weight in the overall algorithm and with this shift reducing the importance of PageRank the issues that face the TrustRank calculations may well be becoming more evident

In truth, the question is neither here nor there (as important a question as it may be). We will cover why this is in the ...

Conclusion

So what does all of this mean? First, it means that this Thursday or Friday we can expect yet another update to correct some of the issues we've seen rise out of the most current round. This shouldn't surprise anyone too much, we've been seeing regular updates out of Google quite a bit over the past few months.

But what does this mean regarding the aging of domains? While I truly feel that an aging delay or “sandbox” is a solid filter on Google's part – it needs to have a maximum duration. A site from 2000 is not, by default, more relevant than a site from 2004. After a year-or-so the trust of a domain should hold steady or at most, hold a very slight weight. This is an area we are very likely to see changes in the next update.

As far as backlinks go, we'll see changes in the way they are calculated unless Google is looking to revert back to the issues they had in 2003. Lower PageRank, high relevancy links will once again surpass high quantity, less relevant links. Google is getting extremely good and determining relevancy and so I assume the current algorithm issues has more to do with the weight assigned to different factors than an inability to properly calculate a links relevancy.

And in regards to PageRank, Google will likely shift back slightly to what worked and give more importance to PageRank, at least while they figure out what went awry here.

In short, I would expect that with an update late this week or over the weekend we're going to see a shift back to last week's results (or something very close to it) after which they'll work on the issues they've experienced and launch a new (hopefully improved) algorithm shift the following weekend. And so, if you've enjoyed a sudden jump from page 6 to top 3, don't pop the cork on the champaign too quickly and if you've noticed some drops, don't panic. More adjustments to this algorithm are necessary and, if you've used solid SEO practices and been consistent and varied in your link building tactics – keep at it and your rankings will return.

Dave Davies is the owner of Beanstalk Search Engine Positioning. He has been optimizing and ranking websites for over three years and has a solid history of success. Dave is available to answer any questions that you may have about your website and how to get it into the top positions on the major search engines.

Update vs. Post dates: Too soon to tell

Submitted by uxdesign.com on July 24, 2007 - 01:37.

I think that your post, while interesting, is just a too quick on the draw for assessing the impact of another algorithm update. Five days is not enough time to make accurate statements about the impact of google's stated updates. Too, I think google will continue to move the target frequently, if only to make it even harder to figure out (computer vs. computer), as I'd guess some are getting close to at this point. uxdesign.com

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Google Algorithm Update Analysis

Submitted by Heironymous on July 24, 2007 - 19:35.

In my opinion the latest update also tightened the noose on pages with low PR and few links coming in..i.e. the lowest level pages of any site. Until the July update my site was fully indexed, but after I saw the number of pages going into the supplemental index increase until all of my pages except a few hundred were supplemental. I then saw the trend reverse it itself and start all over again. It seems that Google is simply abandoning indexing any page below a PR2. I do agree that PR has become much more disconnected to positioning though, as I am regularly seeing lower PR pages out position my pages. --New York Architectural Photography

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Good points

Submitted by cianuro on July 26, 2007 - 08:28.

Hi Dave. Great article. While there is of course something going on with the algo, this is typical for this time of the year (TBPR export). The only noticeable change for our clients apart from continued steady growth was the removal of a penalty on one. I fully agree that domain age is being given more weight than before and in most cases this is justified. The spam fight continues.

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Hence Proved!

Submitted by razitun on July 26, 2007 - 14:32.

This is really very good article. Last couple of months i have been entered in SEO field so it is very useful information for me. Thank You!

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good one

Submitted by Robberto on July 27, 2007 - 15:45.

Hi David,

Is hard to get bored with the G guys hu?

I agree on the age domain issue, and I also am cooking ideas around controled groth for new domains. I've seen some pretty static sites, with almost no incoming links, slowly get traffic from G.

I think too, that this small war of brains (they try to get relevant listings, we try to be in those...) is very amusing... hehe.

Thanks for sharing your opinions, I found them very interesting.

This will go on ad eternum, so is a ongoing work, patience and perseverance!

Robby

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Updates

Submitted by David Eaves on July 28, 2007 - 20:32.

I also noticed some pretty dramatic changes around the 5th of July, all good for me as well but some of them dropped of again fairly quickly, I'm sure it was just a taste of good things to come.

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Underscores as Word Separators.

Submitted by g1smd on July 29, 2007 - 16:54.

Hyphens, periods, oblique strokes, colons, commas, and several other things have always been treated as word separators. Their usage in URLs allowed sites to rank for those words (obviously backed-up by on-page content on that topic too). However, Google has always treated the underscore as a literal character in its own right, so that HTTP_HOST, when found in a URL or on the page, is treated as being one word.

In that case only a search for HTTP_HOST would find the page with that example code for Mod_Rewrite usage in Apache, and so on. That is, that page would not rank for the word HOST nor the word HTTP if searched for on their own.

Google recently announced that at some time in the future underscores might be treated as word separators. That change alone would surely cause some upheaval in the rankings of any pages using underscores in their URLs?

Additionally, for sites that talk about HOST or about HTTP alone, you would now be finding sites that talk about HTTP_HOST begin to appear as new competition in their SERP; i.e. more competition, and hence falling rankings for the sites previously doing well in the old style listings.

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Backlinks

Submitted by kraig55 on August 9, 2007 - 14:04.

Hi Guys! What do you think about backlinks from bookmark services like Google Bookmarks, Del.icio.us, etc.? I read an article somewhere on the web that G gives an "advantages" to such links...

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translation allowed?

Submitted by Marcs on August 12, 2007 - 13:50.

Thanks for sharing this article, it is the best seo article i read in the last time, if it is possible, i will translate it and post it to my website audiolab.de to give also the only german speaking readers a chance to read it.
@kraig55: yes, the social bookmark services are growing, also in the eyes of google...

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Google Update

Submitted by sudhakar on September 21, 2007 - 05:17.

Hi, I have not found any changes in my page rank, i have found changes in backlinks. now my backlinks are 26 earlier 5. Ecommerce Solutions
I have not found any changes in my keyword ranks. My Question is Why my page rank is not changed, earlier it is 3 now also PR 3 only. http://www.frontlinesoft.com

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:)

Submitted by beanstalk on November 23, 2007 - 23:54.

Hello sudhakar, Dave here. And now you're a 4. :) The problem was, you stayed in the realm of links that got the same PageRank. Now you've jumped to the PR4 level. :)

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Latest PR update

Submitted by chrisdrum on March 15, 2008 - 13:08.

Thanks for Sharing. Even when back links for some of my sites have increased, the PR gets decreased during the last update.

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