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Ok,
so over the past month or so I've been collecting various search
engine optimization questions from all of you. Today, I'm going
to answer what was the most frequently asked question over the
past month.
You guessed it... What is the
Google Sandbox Theory and how do I escape it? When you finish
reading this lesson, you'll be an expert on the good 'ole Google
Sandbox Theory and you'll know how to combat its effects.
So, pay close attention. This is some very important stuff.
Before I start explaining what the
Google Sandbox theory is, let me make a few things clear:
- The Google Sandbox theory is just
that, a theory, and is without official confirmations
from Google or the benefit of years of observation.
- The Google Sandbox theory has
been floating around since summer 2004, and has only really
gained steam after February 4, 2005 , after a major Google index
update (something known as the old Google dance).
- Without being able to verify the
existence of a Sandbox, much less its features, it becomes very
hard to devise strategies to combat its effects.
- Almost everything that you will
read on the Internet on the Google Sandbox theory is conjecture,
pieced together from individual experiences and not from a widescale
objective controlled experiment with hundreds of websites (something
that would obviously help in determining the nature of the Sandbox,
but is inherently impractical given the demand on resources).
Thus, as I'll be discussing towards
the end, it's important that you focus on ‘good' search
engine optimization techniques and not place too much emphasis
on quick ‘get-out-ofjail' schemes which are, after all,
only going to last until the next big Google update.
| What
is the Google Sandbox Theory? |
There are several theories
that attempt explain the Google Sandbox effect. Essentially, the
problem is simple. Webmasters around the world began to notice
that their new websites, optimized and chock full of inbound links,
were not ranking well for their selected keywords.
In fact, the most common scenario
to be reported was that after being listed in the SERPS (search
engine results pages) for a couple of weeks, pages were either
dropped from the index or ranked extremely low for their most
important keywords.
This pattern was tracked down to
websites that were created (by created I mean that their domain
name was purchased and the website was registered) around March
2004. All websites created around or after March 2004 were said
to be suffering from the Sandbox effect.
Some outliers escaped it completely,
but webmasters on a broad scale had to deal with their websites
ranking poorly even for terms for which they had optimized their
websites to death.
Conspiracy theories grew exponentially
after the February 2005 update, codenamed ‘Allegra'
(how these updates are named I have no clue), when webmasters
began seeing vastly fluctuating results and fortunes. Well-ranked
websites were loosing their high SERPS positions, while previously
low-ranking websites had gained ground to rank near the top for
their keywords.
This was a major update to Google's
search engine algorithm, but what was interesting was the apparent
‘exodus' of websites from the Google Sandbox. This event
gave the strongest evidence yet of the existence of a Google Sandbox,
and allowed SEO experts to better understand what the Sandbox
effect was about.
| Possible
explanations for the Google Sandbox Effect |
A common explanation offered for
the Google Sandbox effect is the ‘Time Delay' factor.
Essentially, this theory suggests that Google releases websites
from the Sandbox after a set period of time. Since many webmasters
started feeling the effects of the Sandbox around March-April
2004 and a lot of those websites were ‘released' in the
‘Allegra' update, this ‘website aging'
theory has gained a lot of ground.
However, I don't find much truth
in the ‘Time Delay' factor because by itself, it's just
an artificially imposed penalty on websites and does not improve
relevancy (the Holy Grail for search engines). Since Google is
the de facto leader of the search engine industry and is continuously
making strides to improve relevancy in search results, tactics
such as this do not fit in with what we know about Google.
Contrasting evidence from many websites
has shown that some websites created before March 2004 were still
not released from the Google Sandbox, whereas some websites created
as late as July 2004 managed to escape the Google Sandbox effect
during the ‘Allegra' update. Along with shattering the ‘Time
Delay' theory, this also raises some interesting questions. This
evidence has led some webmasters to suggest a ‘link threshold'
theory; once a website has accumulated a certain amount of
quantity/quality inbound links, it is released from the Sandbox.
While this might be closer to the
truth, this cannot be all there is to it. There has been evidence
of websites who have escaped the Google Sandbox effect without
massive linkbuilding campaigns. In my opinion, link-popularity
is definitely a factor in determining when a website is released
from the Sandbox but there is one more caveat attached to it.
This concept is known as ‘link-aging'.
Basically, this theory states that websites are released from
the Sandbox based on the ‘age' of their inbound links. While
we only have limited data to analyze, this seems to be the most
likely explanation for the Google Sandbox effect.
The link-ageing concept is something
that confuses people, who usually consider that it is the website
that has to age. While conceptually, a link to a website can only
be as old as the website itself, yet if you have don't have enough
inbound links after one year, common experience has it that you
will not be able to escape from the Google Sandbox. A quick hop
around popular SEO forums (you do visit SEO forums, don't you?)
will lead you to hundreds of threads discussing various results
– some websites were launched in July 2004 and escaped by
December 2004. Others were stuck in the Sandbox even after the
‘Allegra' update.
| How
to find out if your website is sandboxed |
Finding out if your
website is ‘Sandboxed' is quite simple. If your website
does not appear in any SERPS for your target list of keywords,
or if your results are highly depressing (ranked somewhere on
the 40 th page) even if you have lots of inbound links and almostperfect
on-page optimization, then your website has been Sandboxed.
Issues such as the Google Sandbox
theory tend to distract webmasters from the core ‘good'
SEO practices and inadvertently push them towards black-hat or
quick-fix techniques to exploit the search engine's weaknesses.
The problem with this approach is its short-sightedness. To explain
what I'm talking about, let's take a small detour and discuss
search engine theory.
| Understanding
search engines |
If you're looking to
do some SEO, it would help if you tried to understand what search
engines are trying to do. Search engines want to present the
most relevant information to their users. There are two problems
in this – the inaccurate search terms that people use and
the information glut that is the Internet. To counteract, search
engines have developed increasingly complex algorithms to deduce
relevancy of content for different search terms.
How does this help us?
Well, as long as you keep producing
highly-targeted, quality content that is relevant to the subject
of your website (and acquire natural inbound links from related
websites), you will stand a good chance for ranking high in SERPS.
It sounds ridiculously simple, and in this case, it is. As search
engine algorithms evolve, they will continue to do their jobs
better, thus becoming better at filtering out trash and presenting
the most relevant content to their users.
While each search engine will have
different methods of determining search engine placement (Google
values inbound links quite a lot, while Yahoo has recently placed
additional value on Title tags and domain names), in the end all
search engines aim to achieve the same goal, and by aiming to
fulfill that goal you will always be able to ensure that your
website can achieve a good ranking.
Now, from our discussion
about the Sandbox theory above, you know that at best, the Google
Sandbox is a filter on the search engine's algorithm that has
a dampening influence on websites. While most SEO experts will
tell you that this effect decreases after a certain period of
time, they mistakenly accord it to website aging, or basically,
when the website is first spidered by Googlebot. Actually, the
Sandbox does ‘holds back' new websites but more importantly,
the effects reduce over time not on the basis of website aging,
but on link aging.
This means that the time that you
spend in the Google Sandbox is directly linked to when you start
acquiring quality links for your website. Thus, if you do nothing,
your website may not be released from the Google Sandbox.
However, if you keep your head down
and keep up with a low-intensity, long-term link building plan
and keep adding inbound links to your website, you will be released
from the Google Sandbox after an indeterminate period of time
(but within a year, probably six months). In other words, the
filter will stop having such a massive effect on your website.
As the ‘Allegra' update showed, websites that were constantly
being optimized during the time that they were in the Sandbox
began to rank quite high for targeted keywords after
the Sandbox effect ended.
This and other observations of the
Sandbox phenomenon – combined with an understanding of search
engine philosophy – have lead me to pinpoint the following
strategies for minimizing your website's ‘Sandboxed' time.
| SEO
strategies to minimize your website's "sandboxed"
time |
Despite what some SEO
experts might tell you, you don't need do anything different to
escape from the Google Sandbox. In fact, if you follow the ‘white
hat' rules of search engine optimization and work on the principles
I've mentioned many times in this course, you'll not only minimize
your website's Sandboxed time but you will also ensure that your
website ranks in the top 10 for your target keywords. Here's a
list of SEO strategies you should make sure you use when starting
out a new website:
- Start promoting your website the
moment you create your website, not when your
website is ‘ready'. Don't make the mistake of waiting
for your website to be ‘perfect'.
The motto is to get your product out on the market, as quickly
as possible, and then
worry about improving it. Otherwise, how will you ever start
to make money?
- Establish a low-intensity, long-term
link building plan and follow it religiously. For
example, you can set yourself a target of acquiring 20 links
per week, or maybe
even a target of contacting 10 link partners a day (of course,
with SEO Elite, link
building is a snap). This will ensure that as you build your
website, you also start
acquiring inbound links and those links will age properly –
so that by the time your
website exits the Sandbox you would have both a high quantity
of inbound links
and a thriving website.
- Avoid black-hat techniques such
as keyword stuffing or ‘cloaking'. Google's search
algorithm evolves almost daily, and penalties for breaking the
rules may keep you
stuck in the Sandbox longer than usual.
- Save your time by remembering
the 20/80 rule: 80 percent of your optimization can
be accomplished by just 20 percent of effort. After that, any
tweaking left to be done
is specific to current search engine tendencies and liable to
become ineffective
once a search engine updates its algorithm. Therefore don't
waste your time in
optimizing for each and every search engine – just get
the basics right and move on
to the next page.
Remember, you should always optimize
with the end-user in mind, not the search engines.
Like I mentioned earlier, search
engines are continuously optimizing their algorithms in order
to improve on the key criteria: relevancy. By ensuring that your
website content is targeted on a particular keyword, and is judged
as ‘good' content based on both on-page optimization (keyword
density) and off-page factors (lots of quality inbound links),
you will also guarantee that your website will keep ranking highly
for your search terms no matter what changes are brought into
a search engine's algorithm, whether it's a dampening factor a
la Sandbox or any other quirk the search engine industry throws
up in the future.
Have you
taken a look at SEO Elite yet? If not...
What's stopping you?
Now, get out there and start smoking
the search engines!
All the best,

Brad Callen
Professional SEO
SEO Elite: SEO Software
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