Over on our Cinnamon Edge blog, we talk about one of the mysteries of Google search results - how a perfectly good website can be listed one day and apparently de-listed the next, and how this 'Google dance' often ends with that site higher in the results than it was before.
But there's another version of the dance, and Google stages it weekly.
It's a result of Google's regular updating of its search results. Google's problem is that it can't close down its service for a second, so updating has to be done in stages, across 10,000 servers worldwide. So at any one time during the update process, some of the servers will have the updated version of the results and some will have the old version.
With 10,000 servers to choose from, there's a good chance that the results of any fresh search you make will be delivered by a different server than the last one. So you will often see websites move up and down the search results with each search you make. This means that websites appear to 'dance' in the results, and this only ends when all 10,000 servers have been updated.
Between updates, websites can also move up and down the results as new sites are indexed, links are followed and websites are updated and improved.
But they dance most energetically once a week, usually on a Monday, apparently, when Google re-jigs its results, server by server, across the planet.
Roy
PS Get more help and advice about online marketing in Bury St Edmunds from Cinnamon Edge.
Showing posts with label serps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label serps. Show all posts
Sunday, 28 March 2010
The Google Dance
Thursday, 3 December 2009
Online, Internet, or Search Marketing?
What IS in a name?
My surname, for instance, means either 'mighty as a boar' if it's from Saxon Germany, or 'native of Evreux' in what is now northern France, if it's Norman.
My wife Jacqui's surname is French-speaking Swiss, via Jersey. I'm still amazed at the series of coincidences that brought us both to Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk.
Anyway, I recently posed a question on Facebook:
'If you promote your business on the web, which do you use - online marketing, Internet marketing or search engine marketing?'
What I was trying to get at was not so much, 'Which do you use' as, 'What do you call it?' because the three terms are to most people virtually interchangeable. What I really wanted was a clue as to what search term I should optimise a website for.
But the people who answered tended to choose one type over the others, so I had to re-think.
Now, I still think 'online marketing' is interchangeable with 'Internet marketing', but they both cover a wide range of marketing strategies that happen to employ Internet-based technology. Emails, for example, or direct mail sending people to an otherwise obscure website.
For instance, Andrew Reynolds doesn't bother too much about optimising his sales pages for the search engines because he knows he can rely on exceptionally good direct mail to send visitors to them.
So if you're not on Mr Reynold's list, you might not ever stumble across one of his promotions in time to take advantage of it.
Whereas what we specialise in, under the broad title of 'online marketing' is in fact search engine marketing, or even just 'search marketing'. We get our clients' websites higher in the search results and we add a few more useful listings as well, so our clients don't so much show up on Google as invade it.
Much like the Saxons and Normans invaded England, actually. Maybe it's in the blood.
So that's what I've been doing with some of my time: invading Google and daydreaming around quotes from Shakespeare. How very English.
Roy
My surname, for instance, means either 'mighty as a boar' if it's from Saxon Germany, or 'native of Evreux' in what is now northern France, if it's Norman.
My wife Jacqui's surname is French-speaking Swiss, via Jersey. I'm still amazed at the series of coincidences that brought us both to Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk.
Anyway, I recently posed a question on Facebook:
'If you promote your business on the web, which do you use - online marketing, Internet marketing or search engine marketing?'
What I was trying to get at was not so much, 'Which do you use' as, 'What do you call it?' because the three terms are to most people virtually interchangeable. What I really wanted was a clue as to what search term I should optimise a website for.
But the people who answered tended to choose one type over the others, so I had to re-think.
Now, I still think 'online marketing' is interchangeable with 'Internet marketing', but they both cover a wide range of marketing strategies that happen to employ Internet-based technology. Emails, for example, or direct mail sending people to an otherwise obscure website.
For instance, Andrew Reynolds doesn't bother too much about optimising his sales pages for the search engines because he knows he can rely on exceptionally good direct mail to send visitors to them.
So if you're not on Mr Reynold's list, you might not ever stumble across one of his promotions in time to take advantage of it.
Whereas what we specialise in, under the broad title of 'online marketing' is in fact search engine marketing, or even just 'search marketing'. We get our clients' websites higher in the search results and we add a few more useful listings as well, so our clients don't so much show up on Google as invade it.
Much like the Saxons and Normans invaded England, actually. Maybe it's in the blood.
So that's what I've been doing with some of my time: invading Google and daydreaming around quotes from Shakespeare. How very English.
Roy
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