10. November 2011 · Comments Off · Categories: My Page Rank

The website rankings checker, checks to see what position your keyword ranks at. Google Keyword Checker looks at the top 100 positions. we have a wide range of Free Search Engine Positioning tools!

Are you struggling with search engine optimisation and need some help? We’ve got the tools you need!

In our articles section you will find the information you need to optimise your pages, make them rank high and keep them that way.

Our free website rankings tools include a Google keyword checker, meta tag generator and free website statistics tracking package that you can use to monitor your traffic. In addition we’ve added some useful tools in our resources section that will help you gain traffic to your website.

We will be constantly refining and adding to the free tools section and adding more articles to educate the budding webmaster over the coming weeks.

We’ve recently added a quick tutorial section which will give you the background you need to begin optimising your pages for the search engines and gaining high rankings. Start with learning how to write your page titles and meta tags correctly and then move on to some of the more advanced techniques like publishing articles and progressive linking campaigns.

We’ve also covered some of the basics of website design and included some information on using website templates and do’s and don’ts for using some advanced scripting in DHTML, Flash and javascript.

Search for anything using your favorite crawler-based search engine. Nearly instantly, the search engine will sort through the millions of pages it knows about and present you with ones that match your topic. The matches will even be ranked, so that the most relevant ones come first.

Of course, the search engines don’t always get it right. Non-relevant pages make it through, and sometimes it may take a little more digging to find what you are looking for. But, by and large, search engines do an amazing job.

As WebCrawler founder Brian Pinkerton puts it, “Imagine walking up to a librarian and saying, ‘travel.’ They’re going to look at you with a blank face.”

OK — a librarian’s not really going to stare at you with a vacant expression. Instead, they’re going to ask you questions to better understand what you are looking for.

Unfortunately, search engines don’t have the ability to ask a few questions to focus your search, as a librarian can. They also can’t rely on judgment and past experience to rank web pages, in the way humans can.

So, how do crawler-based search engines go about determining relevancy, when confronted with hundreds of millions of web pages to sort through? They follow a set of rules, known as an algorithm. Exactly how a particular search engine’s algorithm works is a closely-kept trade secret. However, all major search engines follow the general rules below.