Ranking The SEO Ranking Factors

Back in 2005, SEOmoz tried to assemble a list of all the possible search engine ranking factors out there and get various experts to rate them. I say tried to because while they had a list, and ratings, no one knows all the factors or exactly how each individual search engine chooses to use them. […]

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Back in 2005, SEOmoz tried to assemble a list of all the possible search
engine ranking factors out there and get various experts to rate them. I say
tried to because while they had a list, and ratings, no one knows all the
factors or exactly how each individual search engine chooses to use them. But I
admired the determination. SEOmoz is back at it, with version two of the list
now out. Some background about it
here;
the list is here,
and some further observations by me are below.

There’s a lot to digest here. A lot. That’s why it’s particularly useful to
make use of the "Top 10 Positive Factors" section at the top of the report. In
fact, I wish the report had been organized this way, with an alternative list
showing everything and buried away from those new to SEO. Give them the most
important basics; don’t blind them with too much!

The most important factors based on expert voting are:

  1. Keyword
    Use in Title Tag
  2. Global
    Link Popularity of Site
  3. Anchor
    Text of Inbound Links
  4. Link
    Popularity within the Site’s Internal Link Structure
  5. Age of
    Site
  6. Topical
    Relevance of Inbound Links To Site
  7. Link
    Popularity of Site in Topical Community
  8. Server
    is Often Inaccessible to Bots
  9. Keyword
    Use in Body Text
  10. Global
    Link Popularity of Linking Site

Notice number one — that you have HTML title tags that reflect the key terms
you want your page to be found for. That’s been the advice since I first
starting writing about SEO back in 1996. Eleven years later — and even in the
age of it’s all about links — it remains the top ranked tip by so many experts.

Now let’s flip the list around into how hard it is to control these factors:

Easy

  • Keyword
    Use in Title Tag
    : Totally in your control. We continue to have sites that
    get ranking boost just for making this change. Remember that
    Jason Calacanis
    challenge
    where SEO already has gotten him a traffic increase of 21
    percent? That’s almost

    all down to
    title tag changes.
     
  • Link
    Popularity within the Site’s Internal Link Structure
    : This is easy in that
    you can link to your own pages in however you’d like. So do think carefully
    about how you link. Point to your own articles and describe them using the
    terms you want them found for. That can contribute.
     
  • Server
    is Often Inaccessible to Bots
    : If you can’t be indexed, you can’t rank.
    Keep your server online. But don’t freak. Being down on the odd occasion is
    unlikely to wipe you out.
     
  • Keyword
    Use in Body Text
    : This is basic. Want a page to be found for certain
    words? It continues to be good advice that you actually use those words on the
    page. Not 100 times in a row. Not for any particular "density." Just use them
    as it makes sense to use them.

Medium

  • Age of
    Site
    : Brand new site? Nothing you can do but get older, really, to control
    this. Some like to buy domains, but search engines can also detect transferred
    domains and count age from when the transfer happened. Google is the most
    noted for this. One thing you can do is register your domain for a long time,
    say five or ten years. That at least suggests you want to hold on to it more
    than the average person, so it might help.

Hard

  • Global
    Link Popularity of Site
    : You can’t do much here easily beyond building up
    good quality links. Get good links, and you should be helping your site
    mature. Links take work, but they’re worth it. See our
    link building
    and
    linkbait
    sections for some articles and advice on this.
     
  • Anchor
    Text of Inbound Links
    : Hard in that you can’t control exactly how people
    link. But doing things like thinking about how you name your pages or articles
    (or site), or how you pitch a link request, can have an influence. Remember
    that Google will now tell you the most popular anchor text used to point at
    you. Google Now
    Reporting Anchor Text Phrases
    explains this in more detail.
     
  • Topical
    Relevance of Inbound Links To Site
    : Are the sites linking to you related
    to what you are about? Hard to control, other than to make sure you are
    requesting links from sites that cover similar topics to you. That’s just good
    marketing, of course — but time consuming.
     
  • Link
    Popularity of Site in Topical Community
    : Pretty similar to the above.
     
  • Global
    Link Popularity of Linking Site
    : Is the site linking to you important?
    Then it can transmit that importance to you more than other sites might. This
    has been a known factor for years. It’s not about number of links. It’s about
    the quality (importance) and context (link text or anchor text) of those
    links.

In the report, note that there are comments for each of the factors from many
of the experts that rated them (I was one of the 34 involved). These are great
to read. But you won’t see all the comments unless you use the "Show the rest of
the comments" links for each factor. So do it!


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Danny Sullivan
Contributor
Danny Sullivan was a journalist and analyst who covered the digital and search marketing space from 1996 through 2017. He was also a cofounder of Third Door Media, which publishes Search Engine Land and MarTech, and produces the SMX: Search Marketing Expo and MarTech events. He retired from journalism and Third Door Media in June 2017. You can learn more about him on his personal site & blog He can also be found on Facebook and Twitter.

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