Showing posts with label Google Panda help. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google Panda help. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2012

Google Penguin Update


Google Penguin Update

For companies that have been hit by the Penguin update, one common theme appears to be a severe lack of natural links, according to a blog post by Glenn Gabe at G-Squared Interactive. He noted five common issues these sites are all facing:

Paid text links using exact match anchor text: 

For companies that want to rank for a certain term (such as “red widgets”) one way to accomplish this is by buying links from other websites with that exact matching anchor text. This is against Google’s guidelines, as Google would consider this a paid link that exists solely to manipulate PageRank, rather than to provide any value to visitors.

Comment spam: 

Two things proved problematic for websites trying to unnaturally rank for specific keywords: signatures in comments that contained exact match anchor text; and people who used a spammy user name (e.g., Best India SEO Company) as exact match text.

Guest posts on questionable sites: 

Although guest posts are a legitimate way to earn links to your site, sites dinged by the Penguin had links pointing to their website from sites filled with low-quality articles where the focus was on the anchor text rather than the content.

Article marketing sites:

Thin content featuring links with exact match anchor text were another common factor among affected sites.

Links from dangerous sites: 

Do you have inbound links from sites that have been flagged for malware, numerous pop-ups, or other spammy issues? This was another factor that caused websites to lose their Google rankings, so links to and from web spammers or “bad neighborhoods” are a danger.

Article Sources - Search Engine Watch


Google Penguin Update


Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Google Panda Updates till 2012

Google Panda Updates

Google Panda could be a amendment to the Google's search results ranking algorithm that was initial released in February 2011. The amendment aimed to lower the rank of "low-quality sites", and come back higher-quality sites close to the highest of the search results. CNET reported a surge within the rankings of stories websites and social networking sites, and a drop in rankings for sites containing massive amounts of advertising. this alteration reportedly affected the rankings of just about twelve % of all search results. Soon once the Panda rollout, several websites, together with Google's webmaster forum, became full of complaints of scrapers/copyright infringers convalescing rankings than sites with original content. At one purpose, Google publicly asked for information points to assist detect scrapers higher. Google's Panda has received many updates since the initial rollout in February 2011, and also the impact went world in April 2011. to assist affected publishers, Google printed an advisory on its blog, therefore giving some direction for self-evaluation of a website's quality.

Google Panda Updates

  • 24 Feb 2011 (USA-only)
  • 11 April 2011 (all English language results)
  • 10 May 2011
  • 16 June 2011
  • 23 July 2011
  • 12 August (all languages and probably not a new 'English' update)
  • 28 Sept 11
  • 9th Oct 2011
  • 13th Oct 2011
  • 20th Oct 2011
  • 18th Nov 2011 (Google's tweet announcing this Panda update)
  • 15th Jan 2012
  • 28th Feb 2012
  • 23rd March 2012
  • 19th April 2012. Don't confuse changes resulting from this update with those from the webspam    update of (approx) 24th April. That's a whole other thing.
  • 24th April 2012. This the webspam update and not Panda.


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