Search engines have two major functions - crawling
& building an index, and providing answers by calculating relevancy
& serving results.
Imagine the World Wide Web as a network of stops in a big city subway system.
Each stop is its own unique document (usually a web page, but
sometimes a PDF, JPG or other file). The search engines need a way to
“crawl” the entire city and find all the stops along the way, so they
use the best path available – links.
- Crawling and IndexingCrawling and indexing the billions of documents, pages, files, news, videos and media on the world wide web.
- Providing Answers Providing answers to user queries, most frequently through lists of relevant pages, through retrieval and rankings.
“The link structure of the web serves to bind all of the pages together.”
Through links, search engines’ automated robots, called “crawlers,” or “spiders” can reach the many billions of interconnected documents.Once the engines find these pages, they next decipher the code from them and store selected pieces in massive hard drives, to be recalled later when needed for a search query. To accomplish the monumental task of holding billions of pages that can be accessed in a fraction of a second, the search engines have constructed datacenters all over the world.
These monstrous storage facilities hold thousands of machines processing large quantities of information. After all, when a person performs a search at any of the major engines, they demand results instantaneously – even a 1 or 2 second delay can cause dissatisfaction, so the engines work hard to provide answers as fast as possible.
Search engines are answer machines. When a person
looks for something online, it requires the search engines to scour
their corpus of billions of documents and do two things – first, return
only those results that are relevant or useful to the searcher’s query,
and second, rank those results in order of perceived usefulness. It is
both “relevance” and “importance” that the process of SEO is meant to influence.
To a search engine, relevance means more than simply finding a page
with the right words. In the early days of the web, search engines
didn’t go much further than this simplistic step, and their results
suffered as a consequence. Thus, through evolution, smart engineers at
the engines devised better ways to find valuable results that searchers
would appreciate and enjoy. Today, 100s of factors influence relevance,
many of which we’ll discuss throughout this guide.
How Do Search Engines Determine Importance?
Currently, the major engines typically interpret importance as popularity
– the more popular a site, page or document, the more valuable the
information contained therein must be. This assumption has proven fairly
successful in practice, as the engines have continued to increase
users’ satisfaction by using metrics that interpret popularity.
Popularity and relevance aren’t determined manually. Instead, the
engines craft careful, mathematical equations – algorithms – to sort the
wheat from the chaff and to then rank the wheat in order of tastiness
(or however it is that farmers determine wheat’s value).
These algorithms are often comprised of hundreds of components. In
the search marketing field, we often refer to them as “ranking factors”
Moz crafted a resource specifically on this subject – Search Engine Ranking Factors.
Source: Moz.com