Home

Web Marketing: How to Measure Your Website with Panda

|
Updated:  
2016-03-26 16:13:15
|
Customer Analytics For Dummies
Explore Book
Buy On Amazon

A useful tool in web marketing is measuring your website with Panda. In early 2011, Google began an ongoing rollout of its biggest ranking algorithm change ever: Panda. Panda adds overall page and site “quality” as a ranking factor. Quality still matters, but Panda changes the way Google evaluates it:

  • Sites, not pages: Until now, Google has always looked at the Internet as a huge collection of pages, rather than a collection of websites. So, if you had 99 awful pages on your website, and one fantastic one, that fantastic one could rank well. The other 99 didn’t do any harm. Now, Google looks at complete sites. So, those 99 pages could drag down the rest of your site.

  • Language evaluation: There are strong indications that Google is now evaluating writing quality. The Panda algorithm looks for spelling, grammar, and possibly even reader-friendly layouts and takes all that into account.

  • Overall site quality: Panda also ups the importance of site speed, usability, and creating something folks use. If visitors “bounce” right back to Google the moment they see your homepage, that could hurt you in the rankings.

With all these changes, you can do three things to improve your rankings:

  • Avoid duplication. More than ever, avoid duplication. Avoid even rewritten content — Google will catch anything remotely resembling a duplicate. Make sure that every page of your site has unique value.

  • Avoid “thin” pages. Lots of sites have massive collections of user profile pages, “e-mail to a friend” forms, and other pages with 10–20 words and nothing else. These pages get flagged as low quality. Because low-quality pages can drag down the entire site’s ability to rank, remove thin pages from your site, or exclude them from search engine crawls using robots.txt and the meta robots tag.

  • Use Webmaster Tools. Google provides direct feedback regarding your site in Webmaster Tools. Install it. Use it. Live by it.

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

John Arnold is a renowned marketing trainer and speaker as well as an entrepreneur and small business advisor. Arnold continues to train and advise small business owners as a Constant Contact regional development director.

Michael Becker is the managing director of North America at the Mobile Marketing Association. Becker has written more than 80 articles on mobile marketing and is an adjunct professor of mobile marketing at Golden Gate University.

Marty Dickinson is the president of HereNextYear.com, a company that combines writing, speaking, and internet strategy to help clients become recognized authorities in their fields. Dickinson also works as a business consultant to web designers and SEO specialists.

Ian Lurie has been a digital marketer for over 25 years. He created and sold the digital agency Portent, Inc. and provides consulting and training services.

Elizabeth Marsten is the senior director of strategic marketplace services for Tinuiti. Marsten has experience in Google AdWords, Microsoft Ads, Amazon Advertising, Facebook, and other platforms.