- Recent events: "Trayvon Market vs. Mike Zimmerman"
- Recurring events: "UEFA Champions League Scores"
- Frequent updates: "Honda Civic reviews"
1. Freshness by Inception Date
Any particular webpage is given what is called a "freshness" score, depending on its respective inception date. It is incredibly important to note that this score decays over time. The freshness score can help expand the visibility of a particular morsel of content for certain search queries; however, its visibility wanes as the content becomes older.
2. Document Changes Affects Freshness
It isn't just how old a webpage is that influences the freshness factor. What plays a huge factor is how much change one makes on his or her own website. For instance, the alteration of a minor sentence will not have nearly as great of a freshness impact as a larger change.
3. Rate of Document Change
Content that is altered on the regular is scored differently than content that is altered less frequently. The frequency of content alteration is another factor that makes a big difference SEO-wise. For example, take a look at the homepage of Fox News. It makes updates to its website every single day, including on weekends. Fox News will get a higher score in the eyes of Google's ranking methodology than a website that makes updates once a week, even if that one article gets greater hits than the hits Fox gets on all of its articles combined. True, that one article will be ranked higher than any of Fox's articles, but overall, Fox will be rated just as high, if not higher, thanks to freshness of content. Of course, the content still has to be valuable and view-worthy. An article with nothing but keywords that is just incoherent will not do.
To be continued.
No comments:
Post a Comment