Search Engine Tips.
M. Pugh.
Where there was once a myriad of ways to confuse and manipulate Google, one
thing is now becoming apparent. The aim of Google is to present fair and
unbiased return for your efforts, genuinely rewarded whether large or small,
wealthy or poor. The aim is to eradicate any form of cheating and manipulation,
in favour of pure results which reflect genuine attempts to put your infant
website on the adult web.
By and large today, and much to Googles credit, this goal now is being achieved, step by
little step, yard by hard won yard. Meta tags are now all but redundant, multiple repetition
becoming useless. We all know the scams and the tricks, and we all know they are
becoming less effective.
I was a systems programmer for many years, quite a few of which were in
designing and building efficient indexes for huge concerns. Armed with this
perspective it is easier for me to see where Google is headed in the long run,
their ultimate goal being a real index for real people with real websites, I
think a very laudable concept in a very monetary world, where they are no doubt
deluged with promises of remuneration for consideration.
The good news for all of us out here with a semblance left of fair play and
level playing fields is that ultimately this should lead to two factors becoming
predominant. The first will be content, pure and simple, so if you can take the
time to actually write about what it is you sell, enjoy doing, wish you were
doing etc, then chances are you will be heard. The more interested you are
in your subject, the longer your missive, and the more likely it is you will be
judged as real and actual site rather than a manufactured effort to manipulate
the ether in your favour. Content will be practically all, and that is how it
should be in my book, so if your website strays off your said concept to include
a can of worms on many other subjects thrown in, expect no mercy.
Also the secondary concept will be twofold, in my opinion. The relevant data
still has to be sort of prioritised in order to sift the best from the worst of
valid sites, so to speak. That is where it becomes a little more of a grey coloured area.
One mans meat is another mans poison, and who is to say what is predominant and
what is somewhat downgrade. I would suspect actual surfing behavior will govern
how this comes out, the rule of majority. The more hits a site gets, once
all the tweaking mechanisms are weeded out, the higher you will go in the
rankings. Many search engines are already incorporating this idea via the Alexa
toolbar, and it makes a lot of sense. After all, you cant really tweak content
too much, and content will be very heavily scrutinised, and you cant really
tweak the surfing behavior of trillions. Also I think categorisation and
Regional grids will be imposed so as to limit searches either Geographically or
scalewise as is currently required.
I had envisaged writing my own online real time search, front ended with Perl,
accessing live sites via the IP address bands of websites, and returning the
first ten to twenty hits encountered. This being a more live exercise on current
data without missing out on sites created since Googles last run, which was then
a five weekly cycle. Thankfully they have addressed this problem too, in an also
very fair way of intuitively guessing which sites are genuinely being worked on
and are real and viable, through currently experimental algorithms which seem to me
favouring the real over the artificial. So I will hold back on indexing live
data, probably indefinitely, purely now in deference to their having pretty well plugged their
annoying five week wait hole.
Through all of this I really think we should applaud the whole Google operation for
being so resistant to the obvious temptation to placate the rich and the
powerful at the expense of the whole internet, and the integrity of the whole
internet. They are now firmly in the driving seat, and are there purely because they
are fair, an unusual trait in an otherwise somewhat shoddy world compared with
today and its values.Way back I used to do deals on handshakes, I would shake Googles
hand today for putting content over profit, and people power over consortiums.
Malcolm Pugh October 2003.
This was pre Google November algorithm change, which I loved, and many hated.
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