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Some Google Related SEO Terms Explained

October 6, 2008 Posted under: Making Money Online by Caroline Middlebrook

I’ve noticed a fair amount of confusion over a few terms in the comments to some of my recent posts in the AdSense Project so I have put together this little glossary which I hope clarifies things a little.

Being INDEXED in Google

Google is basically a database of web pages and when somebody performs a search on Google it checks its database to bring back pages that are relevant to the search term. If your site is not in the database it cannot appear in the search results. Being in the Google database is known as being indexed and all it means is that Google knows of the existence of the url.

In the bad old days you would have to go to Google’s submission form to tell them about your new site or page but because of the speed and frequency at which Google spiders the web looking for content this is no longer necessary. A quick way to get into the Google index is to get a link back from another page that is already in the index and is updated regularly. A great way to do this is to bookmark your new site / page at one of the top social bookmarking sites or a big web 2.0 site such as Squidoo.

To check if your site is indexed, perform the following search in Google:

site:domain

eg, typing in site:http://www.caroline-middlebrook.com will bring back all the pages from my domain that Google has in its index.

Being RANKED in Google

People often confused being indexed with being ranked. Being indexed merely means that your site is in the database, it does not mean that it will come up when somebody types in a related search term. For example, type in site:http://www.johnchow.com and this will show that Google has many pages from johnchow.com in its index. However now type in simply john chow and note that johnchow.com does NOT come near the top of the results!

I’ll explain why that is later in the article but be aware of the difference.

A ranking in Google is a relationship between a particular search term and a page. So for example, my Twitter Guide ranks number #1 in Google for the term twitter guide. However that page does not rank number #1 for the term random search term. A page can rank for many different terms but often it is difficult to rank in the top position for multiple phrases on the same page. We usually optimise a page for one particular search term.

The Google SANDBOX

The Google Sandbox is a mythical beast! That doesn’t mean that it doesn’t exist; simply that it is not official but there is much evidence of it. The general theory is that Google does not trust brand new domains so it tends to put them in the ’sandbox’ for a period of a few months while some kind of authority is established. When a site is in the sandbox it is still indexed, but it tends not to rank as well as it could do for competitive keywords. Quite often, a sandboxed site can still rank number #1 for low competition keywords.

The period of time that a site spends in the sandbox varies, but is typically 3-6 months. It tends not to be ‘released’ until some time has passed and Google is satisfied that the site has some authority so it will need to have some good, relevant keywords and some backlinks. Also note that not all sites go into the sandbox.

What quite often happens is that when a site is first indexed it ranks quite highly for its target keywords but then it appears to drop out of the index altogether only to appear a few days later but ranking much lower. This is perfectly normal behaviour for Google and nothing to be worried about.

Google PageRank

PageRank is an indicator that Google put in place many years ago and has caused an enormous amount of discussion and debate in the SEO community. Although it is called Pagerank, it does not really indicate where a page will rank in the search engine results pages (serps). It is an indicator of the number and quality of backlinks that a particular page has.

Many people put a lot of emphasis on building PageRank but the thing to remember is that it is just an indicator, nothing more. PageRank is only one is a great many factors that determine your ranking in the serps and it does not do anything to directly drive traffic. Your most important stat as far as SEO goes is your actual traffic which you can see from your own analytics software.

However, it does have a use - it gives other people an indicator of the ranking of your page and this can come in useful if you want to trade links with people, sell advertising space, sell the domain and so on.

Alexa Ranking

Alexa is an independent company that has nothing whatsoever to do with Google. It publishes a toolbar that tracks usage statistics from its users and from those statistics Alexa publishes ‘traffic’ rankings of websites that its users visit using the toolbar. The trouble with Alexa is that it only tracks traffic from people using the Alexa toolbar which is not everybody so it is not an accurate traffic indicator.

It is about as useful as PageRank - you are better off looking at your own analytics to see your own traffic stats but your alexa ranking can be useful as an indicator for other people if you want to sell ad space etc. Just remember that Alexa is not Google.

Google SLAP

This is another term that has evolved over the years which has much supporting evidence but no official word from Google. It simply means that for some reason, a particular domain has suffered some kind of ranking penalty and is not ranking as highly as it should. The domain johnchow.com has been Google-slapped for quite some time now which is why it is not ranking well for the term john chow, which it certainly should.

These slaps happen periodically and are not random. Another example was Squidoo which was slapped some time in 2007 I think when it got severely hit by spammers. However the guys at Squidoo worked hard to clean up the spam and pages from its domain are now ranking much better. The slap appears to have been lifted, or at least lessened.

In a similar way, there are some domains that seem to be extremely well liked by Google and tend to rank extremely highly. Wikipedia and YouTube are two such examples. You’ll have a hard time outranking a page from those domains! What this means is that Google is able to apply some kind of additional factor to specific domains as it feels like it which affects the rankings. Play nice with Google and this shouldn’t be a problem for you.


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18 Comments:

yeah, your right — gsandbox is a real myth.

I wonder why most people get into the trap of thinking that is not a myth.

Duplicate content is another myth that most marketers fall for.

Mike Collins
October 6, 2008

Good idea…we kinda take it for granted that our readers will know all the terms we use. Sometimes we have to get a little more basic or we risk losing our audience.

Mike Collinss last blog post..What’s Going On With Google PageRank?

shawal
October 7, 2008

Very good explanation….

I’m now know better about this Google things….

Thanks.

shawals last blog post..Low Quality Links - High Quality Links

kahthan
October 7, 2008

good post caroline, i guess a lot of people don’t know what some of these terms are..

the sandbox is an interesting phenomenon and although a lot of people say it doesn’t exist, well i put two sites up, both got indexed, one appeared in the serps almost immediately and has not budged since while the other has spent the last 2 months hardly appearing in the serps, seems like it has been sandboxed, but tough to say for sure..

kahthans last blog post..Ironblogger Contest: $1000 Worth of Prizes

kouji
October 7, 2008

this is an excellent, excellent article. it explains many important terms and ideas in a very understandable manner, which isn’t too simplistic. i wish it had already existed when i first started blogging. well done. stumbled. :)

koujis last blog post..haiku poem: nature (bird)

Carrie
October 7, 2008

John Chow was mentioned here a week or two ago so I did a search on his name and got “John Cow”. I was so confused b/c I have heard Chow’s name before as a big IM guru but yet couldn’t find his site?

The Google slap is a scary thing.

Carries last blog post..Niche Site Update

Caroline Middlebrook
October 7, 2008

@khathan, this blog is a good example. If you look back through my stats and check the traffic stats you’ll see that at the beginning there was virtually no SE traffic and then there was a bit of a jump a few months later and now around a third of my traffic is from SE’s. I’m pretty sure this blog was sandboxed for a few months.

@kouji, thanks for the stumble :)

@Carrie, yeah I bet John Cow is raking in a TON of traffic as a result of Chow’s ongoing slap!

zncustombuilding
October 7, 2008

well rightly said Alexa measures the traffic of Alexa users…. so this is not accurate and google thing is something that makes the people smile and to frown their brows at the same time……. it’s kinda unpredictable…

sophielc
October 7, 2008

I already knew about these terms but this post should be very useful for beginner bloggers and webmasters.

sophielcs last blog post..Can You Live on £1 a Day?

Dennis Edell
October 7, 2008

With a primarily beginner readership, I can see myself referencing this post A LOT

You could make a fortune with it on some forums I frequent. LOL

Dennis Edells last blog post..Knowledge Link Love #1: What Are Your Favorite Social Networks and Why?

Mike Huang
October 7, 2008

It’s just amazing how after 10 years, Google owns pretty much the whole Internet. We all depend on a least one of Google’s resources when we surf the Internet.

-Mike

jian
October 7, 2008

Another learning from an Expert SEO… these is not only for the beginners! Thanks Caroline i always read your blogs for the updates to get info.

sven
October 8, 2008

Somehow I feel this is more of a post for some decent SEO juice than anything else :) You have some really great concepts for picking up beginning webmasters. I really wonder how this will work out for conversions / followers in the not so distant future. Your work and efforts already pays off, but it should channel in case you succeed with what you are doing. And if not you still have great projects with a lot of google juice.

Fourth Floor Marketing
October 9, 2008

Thankfully I have managed to miss the sandbox so far with my new blog. I will never understand their algorithm, I can employ the exact same link building tactics on two different sites and have completely different results in terms of getting in/out of the sandbox.

Fourth Floor Marketings last blog post..Monitoring Your Backlinks

Travel SEO
October 15, 2008

This is a great list of SEO terminology and great post to recommend to my trained SEO people. I will link my blog to this post. Thanks!

Gary Roberts
October 17, 2008

Man you don’t even know how long I’ve waited for this since disabling my own Movable Type widget (that doesn’t work since Haloscan bypasses that code).

The sandbox is the focus of much fearful discussions in the forums. It is funny that people flip out when they don’t see their sites on the first 2 pages of SERPS and they assume that they are sandboxed, I think they forget to check the other 200 pages :-(

JR @ Internet Marketing Strategiess last blog post..Affiliate Marketing - 16 Website Content Ideas

Dennis Edell
October 27, 2008

I just had to say LOL! @ JR - oh how true…

Dennis Edells last blog post..Is Your Online Reputation Solid? I hope so, It’s All You Have.


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