Double listings at Google
By David Leonhardt
Have you ever searched for something
on Google and noticed that a website has a double listing
– a main listing and a second listing indented –
and wondered "Why?" And then wondered, "How?"
Google lists up to two pages from a domain
for any given search. Most likely, you already have two pages
listed for your major search terms. Your pages might be listed
at #14 and #456, in which case they don't show up together.
When two pages from the same domain show
up on the same SERP (search engine results page), Google groups
them together. If your two pages are listed at #11 and #18,
they will be grouped on the second SERP...assuming Google's
default of 10 results per page.
However, you can change your default number
of results in the advanced search preferences: http://www.google.com/advanced_search.
Or you can make a one-time change by simply
adding "num=17&" or "num=7&" (without
quotation marks) after "search?" in the SERP URL.
Here is an example of how a 9-result page URL looks: http://www.google.com/search?num=9&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&q=SEO+tips&btnG=Search&meta=
One of my client sites ( http://www.dotcom-monitor.com
) delivers web site and network monitoring. As I write, it
is ranked #3 at Google for "web site monitoring".
One page ( http://www.dotcom-monitor.com/web-site-monitoring.asp
) specifically about web site monitoring is ranked #4 for
that term.
Actually, using the technique above, I
learn that the second page is really ranked #7. How? I set
num=7& and see a double listing. I set num=6& and
the double listing goes away, bumped to the second page.
Why does your competition merit a double
listing at the top of Google's rankings and you don't?
Google wants to deliver results that are
important and relevant. In a search for "apples",
your site on baking might have a very relevant page and it
might even be an important page (and hopefully a tasty one,
too!). But your overall site is not as relevant to apples
as some others. In a search for "baking", however,
you probably have dozens of highly relevant pages, giving
Google lots to choose from.
I should note in the example above that
most of my client's site is about web site monitoring, so
it makes sense that two or more pages would rank very highly
for such a term (except that Google will list only the top
two).
Google gives my own happiness site ( http://www.thehappyguy.com
) a double listing for "happiness". The second listing
is my free "daily happiness" ezine ( http://www.thehappyguy.com/daily-happiness-free-ezine.htm
). Google could have chosen any of a few dozen pages that
are highly relevant to a search for "happiness",
but it chose the two that other webmasters link to most often.
Both examples above are for major search
terms around which a site is built. I have a page ranked #1
for "hairdresser", but don't expect Google to give
my site a double listing. My site is not about hairdressers,
it is about happiness.
What should you do if you want a double
listing for your website?
1. Make sure your website is about a specific
topic. "Things" is too broad, unless you want people
searching for "things" to find you (And quite a
few people actually do search for "things"!).
2. You might have been told to optimize
each page of your site for different search terms. That is
good advice. Each page should be optimized for exactly what
the page is about. But if your website as a whole is about
a certain topic, make sure that most of it is optimized for
that topic, too. Both your visitors and the search engines
will better understand what you are about. Make sure you have
plenty of pages of content related to your main site theme.
3. Seek inbound links to several pages.
Most webmasters make the mistake of seeking links only to
their home page and maybe to their newsletter sign-up page.
I sell four ebooks and give away a free ebook. I have two
newsletters and an online class. I have many topical articles
and a couple funny photos. I seek links to anything I think
people might enjoy, and that tells search engines my site
has depth.
4. Notice a common thread in the advice
above. Content is king. If you have plenty good content, developed
around a major theme, and webmasters want to link to it, double
listings are very possible.
5. Don't over-expect. Google will give
double listings only for major themes, not for all 1,476 search
terms your site is listed for.
Why does Google give double listings?
Who knows, but as a searcher I find it handy to see both the
home page and a highly-relevant deep link.
How long will Google keep giving double
listings? Who knows, so this is just a caveat that they could
change their policy the day after this article is published.
About The Author:
Double listings at Google
Source : David Leonhardt is an SEO specialist
and a freelance writer: Contact him at:
mailto:info@thehappyguy.com
He is author of Don't Get Banned by the
Search Engines:
http://www.thehappyguy.com/SEO.html
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