Wouldn't it be nice if the search engines could comprehend our
impressions of search results and adjust their databases
accordingly? Properly optimized web pages would show up well in
contextual searches and be rewarded with favorable reviews and
listings. Pages which were spam or which had content that did
not properly match the query would get negative responses and be
pushed down in the search results.
Well, this reality is much closer than you might think.
To date, most webmasters and search engine marketers have
ignored or overlooked the importance of traffic as part of a
search engine algorithm, and thus, not taken it into
consideration as part of their search engine optimization
strategy. However, that might soon change as search engines
explore new methods to improve their search result offerings.
Teoma and Alexa already employ traffic as a factor in the
presentation of their search results. Teoma incorporated the
technology used by Direct Hit, the first engine to use click
through tracking and stickiness measurement as part of their
ranking algorithm. More about Alexa below.
How can Traffic be a Factor?
Click popularity sorting algorithms track how many users click
on a link and stickiness measurement calculates how long they
stay at a website. Properly used and combined, this data can
make it possible for users, via passive feedback, to help search
engines organize and present relevant search results.
Click popularity is calculated by measuring the number of clicks
each web site receives from a search engine's results page. The
theory is that the more often the search result is clicked, the
more popular the web site must be. For many engines the click
through calculation ends there. But for the search engines that
have enabled toolbars, the possibilities are enormous.
Stickiness measurement is a really great idea in theory, the
premise being that a user will click the first result, and
either spend time reading a relevant web page, or will click on
the back button, and look at the next result. The longer a user
spends on each page, the more relevant it must be. This
measurement does go a long way to fixing the problem with
"spoofing" click popularity results. A great example of a search
engine that uses this type of data in their algorithms is Alexa.
Alexa's algorithm is different from the other search engines.
Their click popularity algorithm collects traffic pattern data
from their own site, partner sites, and also from their own
toolbar. Alexa combines three distinct concepts: link
popularity, click popularity and click depth. Its directory
ranks related links based on popularity, so if your web site is
popular, your site will be well placed in Alexa.
The Alexa toolbar doesn't just allow searches, it also reports
on people's Internet navigation patterns. It records where
people who use the Alexa toolbar go. For example, their
technology is able to build a profile of which web sites are
popular in the context of which search topic, and display the
results sorted according to overall popularity on the Internet.
For example a user clicks a link to a "financial planner", but
the web site content is an "online casino". They curse for a
moment, sigh, and click back to get back to the search results,
and look at the next result; the web site gets a low score. The
next result is on topic, and they read 4 or 5 pages of content.
This pattern is clearly identifiable and used by Alexa to help
them sort results by popularity. The theory is that the more
page views a web page has, the more useful a resource it must
be. For example, follow this link today -
http://www.alexa.com/data/details/
traffic_details?q=&url=http://www.metamend.com/
- look at the traffic details chart, and then click the "Go to
site now" button. Repeat the procedure again tomorrow and you
should see a spike in user traffic. This shows how Alexa ranks a
web site for a single day.
What Can I Do To Score Higher With Click Popularity Algorithms?
Since the scores that generate search engine rankings are based
on numerous factors, there's no magic formula to improve your
site's placement. It's a combination of things. Optimizing your
content, structure and meta tags, and increasing keyword density
won't directly change how your site performs in click-tracking
systems, but optimizing them will help your web site's
stickiness measurement by ensuring that the content is relevant
to the search query. This relevance will help it move up the
rankings and thus improve its click popularity score.
Search Engines Can Use the Click Through Strategy to Improve
Results
Search engines need to keep an eye to new technologies and
innovative techniques to improve the quality of their search
results. Their business model is based on providing highly
relevant results to a query quickly and efficiently. If they
deliver inaccurate results too often, searchers will go
elsewhere to find a more reliable information resource. The
proper and carefully balanced application of usage data, such as
that collected by Alexa, combined with a comprehensive ranking
algorithm could be employed to improve the quality of search
results for web searchers.
Such a ranking formula would certainly cause some waves within
the search engine community and with good reason. It would turn
existing search engine results on their head by demonstrating
that search results need not be passive. Public feedback to
previous search results could be factored into improving future
search results.
Is any search engine employing such a ranking formula? The
answer is yes. Exactseek recently announced it had implemented
such a system, making it the first search engine to integrate
direct customer feedback into its results. Exactseek still
places an emphasis on content and quality of optimization, so a
well optimized web site, which meets their guidelines will
perform well. What this customer feedback system will do is
validate the entire process, automatically letting the search
engine know how well received a search result is. Popular
results will get extended views, whereas unpopular results will
be pushed down in ranking.
Exactseek has recently entered into a variety of technology
alliances, including the creation of an Exactseek Meta Tag
awarded solely to web sites that meet their quality of
optimization standards. Cumulatively, their alliances combine to
dramatically improve their search results.
ExactSeek's innovative approach to ranking search results could
be the beginning of a trend among search engines to incorporate
traffic data into their ranking algorithms. The searching public
will likely have the last word, but webmasters and search engine
marketers should take notice that the winds of change are once
again blowing on the search engine playing field.
About The Author Richard Zwicky is a founder and the CEO of
Metamend Software, a Victoria, B.C. based firm whose cutting
edge Search Engine Optimization software has been recognized
around the world as a leader in its field. Employing a staff of
10, the firm's business comes from around the world, with
clients from every continent. Most recently the company was
recognized for their geo-locational, or GIS technology, which
correlates online businesses with their physical locations, as
well as their cutting edge advances in contextual search
algorithms.
Did you find the information in this article useful? Feel free
to pass it along to a friend or drop us a line at
comments@metamend.com
About the author:
Richard Zwicky is a founder and the CEO of Metamend Software, a
Victoria, B.C. based firm whose cutting edge Search Engine
Optimization software has been recognized around the world as a
leader in its field. Most recently the company was recognized
for their geo-locational, or GIS technology, which correlates
online businesses with their physical locations, as well as
their cutting edge advances in contextual search algorithms.