There are thousands (literally thousands) of blog entries out there about how to best optimize your web site. The truth is deceptively simple: search engines like Google want content. They’re like a news outlet. They’re looking for the information that their users are looking for. If you have it, they’ll like you more. If you tell them you have it, but you really don’t, when they find out, they’ll drop you off their lists. They want to know that they can trust you and your site.
Google’s Central Conflict
Here’s the problem Google has: you’ve got a website about sauerkraut, and someone just typed ‘how to make sauerkraut’ into the Google search field and pressed the return button. There are 770,000 articles in their index that match this string. How do they decide which article to serve first in the list? Where does your site rank?
In very simple terms, there are a couple of criteria Google uses to determine PageRank:
- How many other sites think your site is a trustworthy authority on the keywords entered?
- How many people have already searched for ‘how to make sauerkraut’ and then clicked on your link?
There are hundreds or perhaps thousands of criteria Google uses or we think Google uses. Here’s a more comprehensive list of Google ranking factors.
Google is Mysterious
Google has to play its cards close to its chest. If it didn’t, far more sites would game the system than currently do. All you’d see when you searched for ‘sauerkraut’ is the ‘Shamwow Sauerkraut Spinner’ (this product doesn’t exist, I just wish it did).
Google won’t tell us directly how to get high rankings. Many times we have to guess from the way sites are ranked, and simple trial and error. It’s a constantly changing game. Web developers can and do gang up on Google to figure out why they do what they do, trading secrets and tips on blogs everywhere. On the other hand, Google can always change its algorithms.
A Few Clues
Google’s Matt Cutts says, “We prefer to focus on things like ‘trust’, ‘authority’, ‘reputation’, PageRank, high quality… The Google philosophy has always been the same: If somebody comes to Google and types ‘x’, we want to return high-quality information about ‘x’.” They repeat this a lot, and many people say, “But that doesn’t tell me how to get to the top of the rankings!”. It doesn’t, but it shows us how we can help Google’s business while they help ours: create trustworthy content that people find useful.
Corollary
Because Google has an enormous team of well-paid engineers focused on outwitting web masters everywhere, beware of anyone who says they know how to get your page to the top of Google’s rankings. As a business owner or marketing director, you can do much of the work yourself by finding partners to link to your site and by writing content that everyone wants to have.