Google Ranking (Partly) Explained

Google has historically been criticized for being a black box. But for the past couple of years the company has been trying to be more transparent in key areas (Matt Cutts in particular has been very helpful here). As the latest in a series of such posts, Amit Singhal, who runs the Google “ranking” team […]

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Google has historically been criticized for being a black box. But for the past couple of years the company has been trying to be more transparent in key areas (Matt Cutts in particular has been very helpful here). As the latest in a series of such posts, Amit Singhal, who runs the Google “ranking” team in search quality, discusses the “philosophies” behind Google ranking.


Here are the core principles according to Singhal:

1) Best locally relevant results served globally.
2) Keep it simple.
3) No manual intervention.

He goes on to elaborate. There’s not a ton of practical or tactical information in the post, however. Along those lines he points to specific quality guidelines for specific advice to webmasters.

Singhal promises a subsequent post in which he “will discuss in detail the technologies behind our ranking and show examples of several state-of-the-art ranking techniques in action.”


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About the author

Greg Sterling
Contributor
Greg Sterling is a Contributing Editor to Search Engine Land, a member of the programming team for SMX events and the VP, Market Insights at Uberall.

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