Sunday, 07 August 2011 13:51
Search Engine ranking is a number that refers to the position your site appears in a list of search results, divided into pages of 10 listings (sometimes referred to as SERPs).
So when I type 'Italian Restaurant' into Google, the websites that have some relevance to this phrase will be listed in the order that Google think shows the most relevant listings first.
If Google thinks a page on your site is the 9th most relevant page, you will appear 9th – which would put you on the first page of results. If your page is the 66th most relevant result, you'll be on page 7.
First page is the ideal because people will only look at the first few pages of results. The higher up the list you are, the more visitors to your website you will get and as a result, more enquires, more sales etc.
One of the fundamental things people don't think about when they ask this question is that their search ranking will be different depending on the search phrase.
You might rank number 1 for 'Italian Restaurant' but number 77 for 'Good pasta restaurant'.
Your ranking will change over time, as you and other site owners add content and links to their sites.
If people can't find your site, you won't get any business from it. It is that simple.
So it stands to reason that if you don't know where your site ranks then you are missing out on a critical piece of information to improve revenue.
The short answer is that Google uses a formula (or algorithm) that decides where your website is ranked for a given search term. It's complicated and they won't tell anyone what the formula is.
But there are generally accepted and proven tactics that will improve your search ranking.
For this article, let's just say it can be a) hard work and b) take some time. You can't pay Google or ask them nicely to be on the front page.
A lot of people will simply type in the name of their company and see what page they are on.
This approach is flawed for a number of reasons:
There are free search ranking tools out there, just search 'search ranking tool'.
The problem with these tools are that most only look at google.com, Bing and Yahoo.com.
Which is pretty pointless if you are a small local business in the UK, Australia or New Zealand (or any other country). Google.com is not going to be the engine that their prospective customers use.
SEOBook has a free down-loadable tool for Firefox that doesn't do too bad a job and you can find out your ranking in google.co.nz (but not pages from New Zealand).
If you are signed up for webmaster tools, you can look under 'Your site on the web' and 'Search Queries'.
However, this report can be a little unhelpful, particularly if your traffic levels are low and you can't specify the terms you are interested in if it's not in the list. If you are ranked lower than 30, it will just tell you "Page 3 +"
There are several software tools you can purchase to avoid having to check your results manually. Many have limited free or trail versions so you can try the software out. If you want to purchase one, most will set you back several hundred dollars with the possibility of ongoing fees to keep the databases up to date.
These tools allow you to check multiple keywords at once, and (importantly) the more sophisticated ones will allow you to specify which country you want results for (ie NZ)
However, some of these tools are violating Google's terms of use by scraping SERP results. Although this will not get your website banned, Google may block your IP address for a while, preventing you from accessing the engine.
Find one (such as SEO PowerSuite) that use API keys to avoid violating search engines policies.
The most popular of these tools include:
Each of these will include slightly different mix of tools and purpose but will include any of the following:
Here at Essentee we run search ranking reports that will save you time and a large cash outlay.
We'll add some recommendations in for you as well so you know where to start to improve your website's search ranking.
If you have the time and/or only want a general idea of where your site sits, then use one of the free tools or do it manually.
If search ranking information is important to the success of your business, you'll need to outlay some cash for a piece of software (or purchase a report).
But this is a small outlay for what is a very important piece of information.
Images: Digitalart
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Comments
Really enjoying your site - lots of interesting content! Thanks to Sandra for pointing me in this direction!
A comment about finding local search results that are not influenced by your history...
Log out of your Google account - easy really, and the results will always default to Google.co.nz results because that is where your IP is based.
If you want to see search results for another country all you need is the search engine URL plus a little secret code and you can view these results.
No outlay, no subscription, no penalties from Google!
Webmaster Tools and Google Analytics are awesome tools but as with all things SEO they do leave a bit of theoretical science in the mix.
All the best
Mike
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