Interview with David Jenyns

by Leslie on February 12, 2010

A couple nights ago I had the pleasure of talking with David Jenyns, a native of Australia, about my upcoming presentation at Ed Dale’s “Coming Home 2″ event. Turns out David has followed me for some years — I’ll let him tell you the small world connection there — so we’ll have loads to catch up on when I meet David in person next week.

The sound quality on this 55 minute call is truly superb and the questions and content are paced just beautifully. Hat tip to David for marshaling a great interview.

Some of the high points covered include:

  • Best bang for the buck in link building
  • Single biggest ranking factor
  • Most serious mistake people make in search

Catch the entire interview over at David’s site:

Interview with David Jenyns

{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

Jay Roweson February 12, 2010 at 5:40 am

This is so frustrating…

I have a 1,000 page website and only 300 of those pages are indexed.

I submitted a site-map + pinged all the pages – but only 300 are being indexed by Google.

What should I do?

PS: Am I really supposed to bookmark 1,000 pages…

Seriously, any advice would be much appreciated, I am very frustrated!

Leslie February 12, 2010 at 5:59 pm

“Indexed by Google” is not entirely easy to measure, so I would not be so sure that you are correct about that. If Yahoo is showing them in a site: query then it is likely that Google has loaded them as well and is just not calling them important enough to list in the result count (which is at best an approximation anyway). Checking for spidering in your server logs is also a great way to know just how much of your site is getting loaded by Google.

In general, lack of indexing is either (1) a broken linking structure where the pages simply can not be found — look at your server logs for spider visits or (2) not enough inbound links or PageRank accumulated in the deeper pages so while actually indexed, they do not get treated as first class citizens in search results (this is the supplemental results effect).

Jay Roweson February 12, 2010 at 8:47 pm

Thanks for the reply Leslie.

I was using the site:website.com search in Google to check how many pages were indexed and basing it off that

I guess I need more links to get all these pages indexed, but then the question becomes how to get so many links?

Thanks again!

Andy Beard February 20, 2010 at 6:08 pm

Note: there is a difference between the number of pages a site: query returns from Google.com and the rest of the world such as Google.co.uk

Leslie February 20, 2010 at 10:20 pm

Yes, this is true, and damn strange too. How much of this is differences across data centers vs. variations in result serving across the Google TLDs is unclear to me. Have not had a need to do more than notice the phenom.

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