Quote:
Originally Posted by igotdreams
I am not talking about a new page. I am talking about the front page of a blog, which is not new if it has already been found and indexed.
It is getting more attention since it is ever changing.
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Same difference.
If the document has changed substantially on the first indexing, then the page has a totally new focus with the words that are on it and the external influences to the page are probably no longer relevant. So the page is given this "new page" status until it is re-analysed, maybe a couple of days, might take a couple of weeks.
If the particular marketplace the page is focussed on is very active with new pages being added or updated to the "competing" sites then it may get pushed down sooner by other "new" pages.
And of course, there are some marketplace arenas where the "new page" status does NOT outweigh the "importance" of the existing top ranking pages, so the new page does not make it to the first page.
With highly active areas this is not likely to happen and you will see a much higher rate of "flux".
So all in all, it's not because it's a "blog", you can have precisely the same effect happening on any "genre" of website if you follow the same pattern.
Then on the other hand we are talking about "rankings" which are not all they are cracked up to be
http://www.webmaster-talk.com/seo-ta...ot-matter.html
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A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds
Thought for today:- Is SEO the only industry where all the cowboys are Indians?
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