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#1
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My website has always held a good position in Yahoo under the search term: website designers
I had consistently been in the top 10 of results, as high as the #4 position which was fine by me, but last week it suddenly dropped to a mid to high teens position. Is Yahoo going to the "we rank on how many sites link to you" and less on actual relevant content in a website? I was also wondering if its just me or do others feel there is something inherently wrong with ranking a website based on inbound links? It seems to me it just creates a situation where ranking along those lines can create a high incidence of fraud to increase page rank. |
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#2
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Link building is not cheap. throwing one more optimized page on a site is. if I were a search engine I would primarily base relevancy of generic terms on linkage data. In the context of calling "raising PR a fraud" then "all SEO is a fraud" if you change the page copy to rank higher you are still "changing the page copy" "to rank higher" why is it that people feel their own techniques are valuable and legitimate and that other common and effective techniques are fraud? since quality link building is so expensive and time consuming it makes the paid ads look more appealing. that is the goal of search engines. they want SEO to cost so much that people use the ads instead.
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The SEO Book |
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#3
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Thanks for the lesson in business. I am guessing you misunderstand or are reading into my question beyond what is there. I'll try again. If ranking a website high in a search engine is based solely on or 85+ percent on inbound links more so than on relevant content on the website, then writing simple copy and subscribing to one of the many "inbound link" websites is not to difficult to do as it seems its done quite often. I write this as I have noticed over the past year or so that when I use certain search engines beginning with a "G" that the content it returns has less relevancy than it used to. Which is why I made the comment that it creates a type of fraud in the results. As an example in Yahoo, under the term: website designers some of the types of results returned on the first page are: makingmoneylinks.marketingrebates.com/10/website-designers.html www.websiteqa.com/websitedesigners http://www.goldenwebawards.com/offic...rdwinner.shtml www.designersguild.com/ The above websites never used to appear in the first page results in Yahoo, but they do now. The designersguild.com has 0 to do with website design and goldenwebawards.com (need I say more...I once submitted a website to them with one word on each page, nothing more and was awarded a Golden Web award for design excellence.) It is returned results like the above that makes me feel that basing a major part of SEO on inbound links is going to eventually backfire. |
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#4
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The SEO Book |
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#5
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But if search engines are relying on linkage data as the major aspect of relevancy, that seems that it in a way has a high probability to create false positives (for lack of a better term). The linking relevancy algorithm just seems to be a short sighted way to for search engines to index and profit. Perhaps I'm approaching this wrong, but as I understand it, the amount of inbound links I have from websites that have to do with website designers will increase my ranking? Or is it just a total amount of links regardless of what the content is on those websites? I'm probably beating a dead horse here I know, but hey, I gotta start somewhere. |
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#6
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look at it this way. if the links were not so important I could make an endless stream of pages with virtually no purpose and still rank well. sure some powerful sites will abuse their positions in the web, but that small number is much smaller than the # of people who are willing to write a bunch more random keyword rich text on their pages. Perhaps I'm approaching this wrong, but as I understand it, the amount of inbound links I have from websites that have to do with website designers will increase my ranking? Or is it just a total amount of links regardless of what the content is on those websites? I'm probably beating a dead horse here I know, but hey, I gotta start somewhere.[/quote]
__________________
The SEO Book |
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#7
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"Is Yahoo going to the "we rank on how many sites link to you" and less on actual relevant content in a website?"
That's been an aspect of their algo since it was launched. How much of an aspect only Yahoo knows 100%. "It seems to me it just creates a situation where ranking along those lines can create a high incidence of fraud to increase page rank." Yahoo doesn't use page rank - that's a google commodity . Yahoo does utilize link popularity though. Yep, very easy to abuse your link popularity, but harder than abusing on page optimization methods. I understand your feelings that results could be easily manipulated, but honestly, I don't think there is an algo that can be put into place where the results are *not* manipulated. Some people are very, very determined . They can change the rules, but the dedicated will always be able to play the game."Perhaps I'm approaching this wrong, but as I understand it, the amount of inbound links I have from websites that have to do with website designers will increase my ranking? Or is it just a total amount of links regardless of what the content is on those websites?" Actually, it's more about the anchor text of those inbound links. I don't see Yahoo being as picky about the source of the inbounds as Google is, but they do seem to have some, albeit low, standards. Just my observations anyway . |
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#8
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Back to "Is Yahoo Indexing Differently"
I am having difficulty finding any evidence that they are indexing at all, unless you are paying them with Site Match.
I have seen Slurp hit my site almost everyday yet they have not made any changes to pages they have indexed. The only pages that are being indexed and changed are the select few I am using Site Match for. The rest show no result of change, no new pages added, and as a matter of fact they have more pages indexed that are no longer in existance then they do current pages. Anyone else noticing this? |
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#9
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Yahoo and MSN on Drugs
I have also found that many of my seo efforts have gone to the crapper....
Up untill a few weeks ago, I had many top serp listings for all my relevant keywords (in MSN and Yahoo), and now I got nothin.... I guess I have start writing more content - yippy skippyMOFO |
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#10
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KegWorks Rich-
We are having the exact same problem...so we moved those old pages to our robots.txt file, and Slurp is still visiting everyday, and STILL no changes! No new pages showing up, no ranks changing, NADA. Any other suggestions would be most appreciated. |
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#11
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- Mike T. |
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#12
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Hello,
I guess we have the same problem as TheRover. We were on the first positions regarding our main topic, now we are on page xx... Other new and mostly unknown pages are on the first pages now. What happened? Is this this new algorythm or are we "banned"? Is there any primer regarding this new algorythm? Sorry for jumping in... Thanks, -Tom |
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#13
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Thomas, if you were banned you'd be out of the index with no mercy shown. A drop down of a couple of pages is normal for search engines when there are changes. It just means something's changed, so it's back to the drawing board time.
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Right now Yahoo seems to me something like Google did a couple of years ago, with possibly less emphasis on links than Google did. Back then with Google a site with a basic number of half-way decent inbound links could easily out-rank sites with multiple times the number of links for moderately competitive searches if the pages were optimiized. I've always felt that for Inktomi you optimize pages and for Google you optimize sites (including and especially links - internal and inbound), and I haven't experienced anything different with Yahoo Search since the switchover. Granted that links are needed, that's a given - they always will be. But with Yahoo it still seems more like on-page, plus to a degree site-wide factors because of how the linking structure affects and interacts with some of the on-page elements. Yahoo's kind of like good old Inktomi, basic SEO 101 with some link pop and anchor text thrown in for good measure - but not to an excessive degree, which I like a *lot* because I don't much care for chasing after links at_all. For example, for one search with about 2 million pages returned, the primary 2-word keyword phrase for a very targeted, highly attractive consumer market: 1 - 54 backlinks (only around 10 IBL from external sites) 2 - 233 backlinks 3 - 61 backlinks 4 - 163 backlinks 5 - 312 backlinks For another search with a couple of million, not awfully competitive by numbers or Overture but very sought after by those pursuing it, mostly all SEO types: 1 - 400 + backlinks 2 - 5,000 + backlinks - and on down the top ten, many many backlinks. The problem is that people were so Google_centric and focused on only linking and PR for so long that plain vanilla on-page optimiization basics were neglected by many. Now that that's changed with Yahoo Search on the scene, it's almost like it's time for a revival and a refresher course for a lot of folks - especially for the newer people who weren't around in the good old days before the time of the total Google domination years. |
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#14
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vaguely on topic:
I've seen a whole bunch of threads over the past few days about sudden swings in the Y! index. Very reminicent of the old google dances. The most interesting comment i saw was by a chap that said that maybe this was all a marketing ploy on Y!'s part. Think about it: Get webmasters all hot and bothered once a month, get people looking to be the first one to spot a "dance" each month and hey presto! Instant renewed/increased interest in Y! Not neccessarily agreeing with it, but it'd be a damn smart move on Y!'s part to shake up the index once a month eh? Nick |
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#15
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Actual page copy seems to be a very high factor for yahoo! at the moment. |
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#16
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>>once a month
Nick, it would be exciting, that's for sure - but so far not too many have shared an awful lot about Yahoo ranking criteria. On the other hand, PR is a topic that's always gotten a lot of attention, even if a lot has been speculative. Once a month is about what it seems now but it doesn't seem to attract as much attention. Maybe it was actually the toolbar PR update that got people so wired. I'm not so sure I'd enjoy hundreds of "scorekeeping" and me too posts, though you're right - it could be a smart move for Yahoo to come up with some kind of gimmick to create a cult following like Google has had. |
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#17
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I've been able to rank extremely competitive terms in Yahoo! (and MSN) just with on page copy. The same sites were no where to been found in G. eg 'application development' 33million+ results on Yahoo! took 4 months to rank in top 30 based solely on on page copy. 'outsourcing services' +6,8million results same time frame, 'software application development' +17million results on Yahoo! same time frame. I'm actually optimizing another less competitive kw set site (+1,1million results - eg 'mortgage website development'), just took around 6-8 weeks to reach top 2 on Yahoo!. again only on page copy. The client was so happy to pause its overture campaign. PS: no black hat stuff, just ethical practice. |
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#18
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I'm experiencing constant crawling and very frequent updating on a few sites - ones that I watch *very* closely. There may be something different going on between sites that have or haven't done Site Match.
For those who have, did you submit your main index page to Site Match, or just interior pages of the site? |
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#19
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Remember : Yahoo are constantly tweaking the serps, sometimes 10 times a day sites drop out and come back all the time, sites move up and down, when they are happy i think we will stop seeing the flux so much !
DaveN |
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#20
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since yahoo introduced 'paid inclusion' as a method of being spidered often, but not as a guarantee of placement, it has become in their best interest to "get the crap out" so that results for paid inclusion clients are improved. personally, i like paid inclusion a lot and think that all engines should demand it. sure, they could have a "shoot in the dark" index like they do now, but as a user and advertiser, i would rather have a cleaner index made up of only paid inclusion listings ...why? 1) paid inclusion participation requires human editors review your site and, while working directly with the site owners, spends quality time creating the right copy feeds. this improves results for engine users (i.e. searchers) 2) paid inclusion prohibits the shady, back-room guy from being successful at creating doorway pages and junk content simply to muck up rankings. 3) paid inclusion shows a fiscal dedication to creating top quality content and relevancy for searching population to me, google or yahoo or anyone have 8 billion pages means absolutely nothing when 7 billion of the pages are database-generated spam pages and domain name pages bought solely to provide 150 links to other pages with similar junk linking. i agree with the poster who thinks heavy inbound links could backfire. i think it's backfiring already. the inbound link weights should be judged on the quality iof the site linking. i know google for one makes this well known that they do judge the weight of the inbound link ...however, i call BS on that because i see sites that only have "weak site" links, but thousands of 'em, and they rank well. Last edited by sebastian : 11-26-2004 at 11:44 AM. |
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