Wednesday 20 March 2013

How Google Work

Search Engines, especially Google have emerged technologically over the years. The computing power of the software and hardware now arrange by the search giant can better be evaluated in terms of the functions it performs and its wide reach.

How Google Work

Search engines’ functions can be divided into three:

Crawling

This is the use of special software commonly known as bots, crawlers or spiders to access information on various websites through principally three means:

  • Links from other websites already in the search engines index or gathered while crawling
  • Url’s/links submitted by webmasters
  • Sitemaps submitted by webmasters

Ordinarily one would visualize the bots as some crawling objects moving rapidly all over the web via links to reach different websites in performing its tasks. However, in reality that is not the case. It operates from a particular physical location and is akin to your web browser. It operates by sending various requests to the web servers from which it downloads/fetches various information on new web pages, updated web pages and dead links which are all used to update its index. As web pages are crawled, new links detected on these web pages are added to the engine’s list of pages to crawl.

In the process of crawling, the engines encounter challenges in the sense that there is a trade off between minimizing the resources it spends on crawling and maintaining an up to date index. It tries to avoid re-indexing an unchanged web page while it strives to capture all changed web pages in order to keep its index always current.

Indexing

The search engines stores the pages its crawlers retrieve from various web pages in a massive index database. It sorts this information based on search terms and arranges it in alphabetical order. This sorting enables rapid retrieval of documents from the index when search queries demand them. It processes the words in the web pages noting the location of the keywords within the pages e.g. title tags, alt attributes. The engines do process many, but not all content types. As an illustration, it cannot process the content of some rich media files or dynamic pages.

To improve search performance, the search engines ignore common words called stop words such as the, is, on, or, of, how, why, as well as certain single digits and single letters. These words are so common and do little to narrow a search, and therefore can safely be ignored. The indexer also ignores some punctuation and multiple spaces, in addition to converting all letters to lowercase, to improve its performance.

Search Query Processor

This is what most search users are conversant with and in fact quite often erroneously regard as the search engine. It comprises some components with the most visible being the search box or interface through which the search user interacts with the search engine, forwarding his search query for processing.

When a user sends in a query through the interface, the index rapidly retrieves the most relevant documents for the search query. Relevance is determined algorithmically based on many ranking factors numbering over 200. A key factor amongst these is PageRank which is a measure of the importance of a web page. This is determined by the number and quality of links pointing to the web page. It is however important to stress that not all links are equal as links emanating from high ranked web pages is considered more powerful than links from low ranked web pages.

Friday 15 March 2013

Guest Posting Industry is renovated by Penguin Update

Guest posting has long been recognized as a great way to build your brand and create quality links, which can improve your search engine rankings. This is something that webmasters and Search Engine Optimization companies have known and utilized for years. The recent Google Penguin update has completely revamped guest posting and turned it into something that it has never been in the past.

The Google Penguin update is calling for better quality, longer-lasting links

Since the Google Penguin update is stressing the importance of high quality links. Guest posting is one of the only viable ways to build permanent, one-way back-links If you are not familiar with the process, it’s actually quite simple. The goal is to write a quality article that would be worthy of a blog. You then find a niche related blog in your industry and you request to write a guest post for their website. If they approve your request, you can have your guest post published on their website and you can leave a back-link to your own website. This back-link is perhaps one of the most important aspects of the guest post.

Guest posting offers more than just increases in ranking

When you guest post, you are going to get more out of your efforts than just an increase in ranking. In fact, guest posting has proven to provide direct traffic. If you target popular blogs in your industry that have relevant traffic, there is potential to get direct traffic back to your website. Readers of the blog post will potentially click your link and this can result in immediate traffic, which you can convert to sales once they arrive at your webpage. There are very few link building methods that can provide direct traffic and improve your search engine rankings at the same time.

It’s an effective strategy and it’s one that has been particularly useful for our business. By guest posting regularly, you can build dozens of high quality back-links which can have a substantial impact on your search engine rankings. Guest posting offers more potential than many other types of link building.

Thursday 7 March 2013

Directory Submission Service Boosting Google Ranks

Submitting your business website over directories is one significant procedure while doing Search Engine Optimization to your business website. Gaining backlinks to your website is as essential as doing On-page optimization to your website. Both go hand-in-hand and neither one outweigh the other. There are a plenty of directories available online and the real challenge lies in sorting the right directories for the right business.

Types of Directory Submissions

General Directory Submission

Deep Link Directory Submission

Niche Directory Submission

Regional Directory Submission

Apps Directory Submission

  • Essential Directory Submission
  • Manual directory submission is very essential for easy approval, which automated approval lacks. Automated submissions & very simple and submissions are done at the expense of ‘just one click’.

  • Deep Link Directory Submission
  • Directory submission is never restricted to home page of your website. Select some of your best inner pages, filled with informative content & submit them to directories. There is a real challenge that lies when submitting your inner pages and that is bounce rate. Never submit a normal page of your website, since this would increase your website’s bounce rate. The inner pages you link should also have a user friendly navigation pattern letting users to stay on you website.

  • Niche Directory Submission
  • Niche directory submission helps. There are directories assigned exclusively for a particular industry. Possibilities of people reaching you will be high when you submit your websites to such niche directories.

  • Regional Directory Submission
  • Small business owners should target directory submission sites that have regional importance. People at your local search these local sites to find the services/ products they are in need of, and find your website once you have your business listed over these regional directories.

  • Apps Directory Submission
  • Are you aware that you have directories where you can list your mobile applications? Your apps need the visibility they require & the only way is to showcase them over directories for iphone, android, blackberry & windows. Get a link back to your service page from these niche spots.

Submitting your website over irrelevant directories & categories is never going to pay you the best outcome doing “Directory Submission”. Hope you found this post helpful & informative.