View Full Version : Is Google being to rigid with the brand new web sites?
Carlos Chacón
04-30-2005, 03:06 PM
I am working with a new web site. The PR was 0 but I got my PR 3/10 in the last week. (Because the latest PR Update).
The problem is that the website stills no ranking properly on the search results. (Not in Google but Yes in Yahoo)
Someone said that Google is taken at lease 6 -or more- months to get listed a brand new website.
Is this really true?
:confused:
hardball
04-30-2005, 07:13 PM
It depends on what terms you are targeting, it could take longer than 6 months. Google is currently a modified version of the waybackmachine, they may at some point turn course and offer current snapshots of the web but one really can't tell.
dannywall
05-02-2005, 05:59 PM
I am working with a new web site. The PR was 0 but I got my PR 3/10 in the last week. (Because the latest PR Update).
The problem is that the website stills no ranking properly on the search results. (Not in Google but Yes in Yahoo)
Someone said that Google is taken at lease 6 -or more- months to get listed a brand new website.
Is this really true?
:confused:
It depends on a wide variety of factors. # of backlinks, the growth rate of the backlinks, the anchor text of those backlinks, are all factors as is the amount of content on your index page, number of pages, frequency with which your index page is updated, frequency with which you have new pages added, and still other things that get too numerous to list, but that gives you the biggies.
If you're just running a "retail store" type site, it can take quite a while to get your site decently ranked, especially if you don't know a bunch about SEO.
-Danny
I, Brian
05-03-2005, 06:42 AM
It depends on a wide variety of factors. # of backlinks, the growth rate of the backlinks, the anchor text of those backlinks, are all factors as is the amount of content on your index page, number of pages, frequency with which your index page is updated, frequency with which you have new pages added, and still other things that get too numerous to list, but that gives you the biggies.
My personal experience is that age of domain is the pivot upon which everything else moves - so if your site is relatively recently registered, then you'll need to have a long-term plan and reliance on sources of customers, other than natural Google traffic.