Google and Jagger's Aftermath
by Jason OConnor
Published on this site: December 23rd, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

Starting somewhere between September 22 and November 17, 2005,
Google launched a major update to their search algorithm which
shook up the search engine optimization (SEO) community and
millions of website rankings. The update has been named Jagger
and is apparently finished.
The keywords that people used to find your site with in Google
may not be producing as many visits any more because the Jagger
changes caused your rankings to plummet. Of course many people
have seen their rankings stay the same or improve in Jagger's
aftermath too.
If your site's rankings have decreased, what can be done
to get back to where you were or better in the post-Jagger
Google world?
There are still a lot of questions to be sure, but there
are some good beginnings of answers as well. Since this update
was rolled out over months and in three distinct phases, it
has been much more difficult to determine what factors have
been given more weight or less.
For instance, IBL (inbound links to your site) have always
been important to achieve high rankings in Google. But there
are many different kinds of IBL's. Link trades, where you
put my link on your site and I put your link on my site may
be less valuable than a one-way link. This has been the case
for a while, but is the importance of each changed now since Jagger? Probably.
I don't know all the answers, and I don't think anyone knows
all the answers save the people at the 'plex (short for Google-plex).
What are some theories? Here are some of the top ones, but
I am not saying they are necessarily true or false. And this
is not a full list, there are most likely numerous other factors
that affect Google rankings after Jagger that no one has recognized
at all yet. The following list consists of ideas I have read
online, which I spend hours each day doing, or some of our
own hard-earned observations using the large number of clients'
websites in many different industries to learn from. Read
the following with a grain of salt, which is always a good
idea when reading any articles or forum posts about SEO or Jagger.
Things That Could Possibly help You More In Jagger's Aftermath
- Aged Domains - Sites with domains that are older
rank better now - the older the domain, the better its rankings
with all other things being equal. (This is probably true
to some degree).
- Very Relevant Links - IBL (inbound links) and
OBL (outbound links) relevancy is more important after Jagger.
This means that if you point to related sites or you get
links from other sites that are related to your website,
you may rank better after Jagger with all other things being
equal.(This is probably true to some degree as well).
- Links From Trusted Sites Help - TrustRank (or
a similar concept) is more important than ever after Jagger.
TrustRank is a concept that says if you get a link pointing
to your site that is highly trusted by Google (trusted either
programmatically or by human editors), then you will rank
better with all other things being equal. See http://www.vldb.org/conf/2004/RS15P3.PDF
- Variety of Links - Links from .edu and .org websites
are good for increasing your rankings and are more important
than ever. (It's vital to get links form a wide variety
of websites. Just like your investing, you need to diversify
your IBL's. (This has probably been true even before Jagger).
- Aged Links - The older the link that points to
your site, the more weight it's given now. (This also has
probably been true even before Jagger).
- Embedded Links - Links that are embedded in sentences
and paragraphs instead of stand-alone links are weighted
more heavily now. (This may be true soon if not already).
- Article Links - Articles are what directories
had been a year or two ago for link building. Links from
the author by-line or within the article that point back
to your site will positively affect your rankings. (And
this is one reason I've chosen to write this article).
- Fresh & Unique Content - Now, more than ever,
regularly updated and added ordinal content will help your
rankings. (This is almost definitely true.)
- Be a Big Guy - If you are a big behemoth site
like Wikipedia, Yahoo, AOL, Ebay, Amazon, etc., you will
rank better than you did before Jagger.
- High Traffic & Stickiness - User popularity
statistics now, or will soon, affect rankings. In other
words, user actions on your website, like how long they
stay (stickiness), how many pages they visit, and even how
many people visit your site in a given period, can all affect
how Google ranks your site. (This may be true soon if not already).
Things That Could Possibly Not Help You Anymore, or May
Even hurt You More In Jagger's Aftermath
- Duplicate Content - Any kind of duplicate content
can hurt your rankings. Some say this only refers to other
sites having the same content as you while others say even
duplicate content within your own site can be bad. I find
the latter hard to believe since all sites have repeating
slogans, phrases, checkout instructions, or any number of
other duplicate sentences within the same site. (Use http://www.copyscape.com/
to find people who are stealing your original written content
and publishing it on their site).
- Hidden Text - Hidden text within your html, in
<div> tags, CSS, or comments, can negatively affect
your rankings. (This is something you should never do).
- Footer Links Some say links in the footer
are disregarded now. (This is one we have found no evidence
for).
- Directory Links - Links from directories are weighted
less now. (This is one we have found no evidence for, but
is most likely true or will be soon)
- Decreased Rate of Link Building - The speed and
volume of inbound link creation to your site from other
websites, if changed, can negatively affect your rankings
more so now. (This one is most likely true too).
- Reciprocal Links - Reciprocal link trades are
worth less then they were before or are worth nothing now.
(It's probably true that they are at least worth less now).
- Linking to Bad Neighborhoods - Reciprocal link
trades hurt your rankings when you link to sites that are
considered 'bad neighborhoods' by Google, such as link farms
or sites that are banned by Google. (This is most likely
true and has been for a while).
- Link Schemes - Participating in link schemes such
as Co-ops or Link Vault can hurt your ranking more than
help them. (I have not found any evidence of this so far
for my client's sites, but this could be true).
Again, I don't think anyone outside Google knows which of
these factors above are true or false, and how each one affects
a given keyword phrase's ranking. In fact, that's the idea.
Google doesn't want people 'gaming' their system. There are
so many variables that need to be considered that it is very
difficult to figure out which ones affect what.
So, what do you do now if your site's ranking have dropped
since Jagger?
If your site was ranking well in the Google SERP's (search
engine ranking position) before Jagger, then it was nowhere
to be found right after Jagger hit, and now your site has
still not bounced back at all, then you probably tripped a
filter, got penalized or even banned. You may have duplicate
content on another site, or someone copied a lot of your content, or you may have canonical
issue (where yoursite.com and www.yoursite.com are considered
two different sites by Google causing it to look like duplicate
content). You may have hidden text, or keyword stuffed your
pages or any number of other things. You're definitely going
to need more knowledge than this article can give you to get your
rankings back.
Some say that Google updates have happened before around
the same time of year, and many sites that tanked came back
after the first of the year. I don't know if this is true,
we'll just have to wait and see. For those who have still
not rebounded, this may be nice to know.
Interestingly, most of our clients' sites either stayed the
same or improved after Jagger. Our own company site improved.
But unfortunately, a few of our other clients saw some decreases
in their rankings right after Jagger, and have since rebounded,
but not at quite the same pre-Jagger levels. Here's what we
did for them:
- Scoured their site for bad outgoing links and made sure
that each site they linked to was indexed by Google and
was not trying to game Google. Any questionable links were
deleted immediately. But we did not get rid of all our link
partners, we just culled.
- Determined the ratio of the different types of incoming
links to learn where improvements were needed. In other
words, we determined the percentage of links to their site
that were link trades, one-way links from related sites,
one-ways from unrelated sites, link advertisements, directory
links, forum signature links and more. We then advised them to increase
their one-way related inbound links that are embedded in
sentences, and not concentrate so much on link trades and
stop getting one-way unrelated link development altogether.
- Cleaned up the HTML on every page, made sure all tags
were closed and that there was no extraneous code on any
page. And we put CSS and JavaScript's in separate files.
- Took out any inadvertent hidden text. One client had
keywords in comment tags in their HTML that we deleted.
- Decreased file size of pages, by taking out old links
and superfluous verbiage, and by re-optimizing the .gif's
and .jpg's.
- Wrote much more succinct Meta descriptions and on-page
verbiage.
- Made sure that every title tag on every page within the
site was different.
- Coached them about the importance of continually developing
good, quality, original content.
- Brainstormed ways in which their sites could entice other
webmasters to link to them because of what their site offers,
such as good content, free Web tools, articles and many
other things. This is called natural linking and what Google
regards as the only legitimate way to build links. Therefore,
this is vital.
We tried to look at the overall link development strategy,
the value of their site, and the quality of the site, both
the content quality and the html quality. A clean, simple,
fast-loading site with natural links pointing to it from a
variety of other related websites, some .org's and .edu's,
others from trusted authority sites, and many from small related
websites, that adds fresh and unique content daily, will rank
well in Google over time and won't be affected by any update,
including Jagger.
The best way for you to learn what to do in Jagger's aftermath
is to read articles like this, participate in forums that
discuss these topics, and most importantly, by experimenting
with your own sites to see what works. This takes time and
patience. So does building quality sites that have things
to offer and that subsequently get natural links. But it's all worth it.

Jason OConnor is president of http://www.OakWebWorks.com
Oak Web Works, LLC http://www.OakWebWorks.com,
a full-service Web firm. He also runs Get Your Tickets: http://www.BestShowTicketsLasVegas.com

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