Easy Google
Redscowl Bluesingsky: Why the Google Sandbox Doesn't Exist
By: Eric Giguere
Despite Google's statements to the contrary, many website owners
still believe in the existence of the Google sandbox. According to
this theory, new sites discovered by Google's crawlers are always
placed in a special "sandbox" separate from the main Google index.
Sites in this sandbox are kept out of the main index -- and the
search results pages -- until the next major update of the Google
index, which could be months away. Domains that are already out of
the sandbox are therefore perceived as being more valuable to
own.
Google's official line, however, is that the sandbox has never
existed. A recent search engine optimization (SEO) contest, the
Redscowl Bluesingsky Contest, has proven them correct. Sponsored by
SEOlogs.com (see http://www.seologs.com/contest.html), this contest
revolves around a made-up phrase previously not found in the Google
index, "Redscowl Bluesingsky". Webmasters had 62 days to get a page
with that phrase into Google's index. The winner would be the page
ranking #1 on the most of Google's data centers (because Google
results are served from several different locations across the
globe) at the end of the contest period.
The key rule in the contest, however, was that only new domains
registered at or after the start of the contest could qualify. If
the sandbox truly existed, then, it would stand to reason that none
of these sites would make it into Google's index during the contest
period. But that wasn't the case. Almost immediately, a number of
domain names incorporating "redscowl" and "bluesingsky" were
registered in various top-level domains and immediately made there
way into the Google index. Using keywords in a domain name is a
well-known SEO technique for associating a website with those
keywords, and many contestants took advantage of this fact.
Some contestants, however, managed to get their pages to rank
highly without including the keywords in the domain name. The
"Redscowl Bluesingsky or Redscowl-Bluesingsky?" page at
http://www.cluelessabout.com/redscowl%20bluesingsky.html is one
example that uses standard SEO techniques to rank well for its
chosen keywords, including using the keywords in:
-
the name of the page;
-
the page title;
-
bolded text;
-
headings;
-
links within the site; and
-
links from other sites.
(It should be noted that most of the other contestants also used
these techniques to great advantage in addition to using the
keywords in their domain names.)
What this contest shows, then, is that new sites are not
automatically sandboxed by Google just because they're new. Any
site that isn't in the index is being filtered for some reason
related to the quality of the site's content. More than likely, the
site's done something that raises a number of red flags within
Google's indexing process.
The conclusion you can draw from this? Study the top-ranked
entries in the contest and see what the SEO experts have done to
ensure that their sites don't get filtered out of the Google index.
And be sure to read and understand Google's Webmaster Guidelines
(http://www.google.com/webmasters/guidelines.html). Play by the
rules to ensure Google indexes your site and you reap the benefits
of that indexing.
Eric Giguere is the author of two AdSense books, "Uncommon AdSense" (http://www.UncommonAdSense.com) and "Make Easy Money with Google" (http://www.MakeEasyMoneyWithGoogle.com). Eric can be contacted at eric@makeeasymoneywithgoogle.com.
Copyright 2006 by Eric Giguere. Permission is granted to reproduce the article in electronic newsletters or on websites provided that the complete article text is included, unchanged, and that neither the copyright declaration nor this license are removed. This article references the redscowl bluesingsky page at CluelessAbout.com.
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