Showing posts with label monitoring search engines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monitoring search engines. Show all posts

Friday, May 1, 2009

Monitoring Search Engine Positions

Part 3

Another factor to monitor carefully is a sudden drop of your positions in all search engines. This is not the same as monthly fluctuations-this is a neon red warning sign! It could mean a number of different things.

If all your search engine positions have plummeted, it may indicate that search engines spiders-those sneaky programs that seek out your site and rank the positions-have found some type of problem with your website.If you have recently changed the code, the spider may become utterly confused and consequently drop your positions disastrously. If a spider creeps up on your website when it is down for adjustments or changed, you may actually disappear from a search engine index entirely, or a search engine may drastically change its formula, and suddenly all of your website come up as irrelevant. If that search engine is a current favorite, it may create a domino effect, causing all of your positions to drop in all search engines.

Some search engines rely on the results from other search engines, and it is vital that you know which engines these are and keep track of all the engines they influence. The biggest problem here is that search engines will sometimes change affiliations, and this can create a major shift in the geography of the Internet. For example, recently Yahoo decided to display only results gleaned from Google. So you must not only monitor your own positions, but you must keep abreast of seismic shifts in the landscape of the Internet as a whole.

Finally, pay attention to your keywords. Keyword are the foundation bricks of the entire search engine system, and if you have found that a number of your positions have plummeted, it may mean that a page of your website has become invisible or inaccessible to search engine spiders. Or the competition for that particular keyword or phrase has recently rocketed into outer space. In either case, you must act quickly and efficiently to regain lost ground.

Your search engine marketing campaign is an investment. It costs you time and money on a continual basis. Protect this investment as diligently as you would your financial portfolio. In the same way, track your positions from an objective perspective, and monitor your positions on a regular basis. Make sure your time and effort reap rewards by keeping your eye on the big picture-your long-term marketing campaign.

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copyright Dan and Deanna Finlinson "Marketing Unscrambled"