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Estimated reading time: 2 minutes, 2 seconds

Reveal Search Ranking Criteria

search artThe worst game on the Internet has nothing to do with gambling or video. It is the game website owners play in trying to guess how the major search engine companies calculate their rankings - what factors reward a page and what factors penalize it in displaying the results of a search. It is this process that makes a page more prominent or hard to find.

This is a long-standing complaint of mine about the way companies like Google, Microsoft and Yahoo impose rules on search. But we don't know what the rules are. I have trouble seeing the benefit of this system other than rewarding companies that sell search engine optimization services and try to help website owners game the system.

Over the years, I have attended presentations at which knowledgeable practitioners relate what observers think are the rules based on how the search vendors behave and the hints they drop. This is a crazy way of doing business. Could you imagine filling out a tax return and not knowing until it has been filed whether it complied with the law or not? This is the system that is operating in web search and I cannot see what harm would come in having the rules known.( Actually, it is like playing a video game because the player does not know what works until playing the game many times.)

That would provide a level playing field. And if the rules shift, they would still be known, and it would eliminate what I consider to be an unnecessary industry - the SEO consultants. We know what the rules are in every other media that I am aware of; why not make the web more transparent?

Bob Scott
Bob Scott has provided information to the tax and accounting community since 1991, first as technology editor of Accounting Today, and from 1997 through 2009 as editor of its sister publication, Accounting Technology. He is known throughout the industry for his depth of knowledge and for his high journalistic standards.  Scott has made frequent appearances as a speaker, moderator and panelist and events serving tax and accounting professionals. He  has a strong background in computer journalism as an editor with two former trade publications, Computer+Software News and MIS Week and spent several years with weekly and daily newspapers in Morris County New Jersey prior to that.  A graduate of Indiana University with a degree in journalism, Bob is a native of Madison, Ind
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