What Size Of Body Section Ranks Highest?
by Jon Ricerca
http://www.SearchEngineGeek.com
This
is another one of the controversial questions in many of the SEO
(Search Engine Optimization) forums, yet it is very easy to answer
for any particular search engine.
While
popular belief seems to be that pages should be very short (less
than 10K) to rank well with the leading search engine, this article
conclusively answers that question~ with a completely different
answer.
The
methodology is really quite simple for this question. I gathered
the results of the queries naturally performed last month by myself
and three associates using Yahoo and Google. I then visited each
page and wrote down the size of the body section of the page.
Those sizes were then tabulated for the top 20 rankings and converted
into a normalized "ranking correlation".
The
resulting number shows each group of body section sizes normalizing
into a number between -100 and +100 showing the likelihood of
being ranked higher/lower. A value of +100 shows that all 10 rankings
were in the proper order to show that pages of the studied size
ALWAYS rank HIGHER than pages of another size. A value of -100
shows that all 10 rankings were in the proper order to show that
pages of the studied size ALWAYS rank LOWER than pages of another
size. Numbers in between show the varying likelihood of rankings
proportionally between -100 and +100.
That
is the number you see on the Y-axis. On the X-axis, we have groups
of page sizes varying from 0 to >100K bytes. Here are the graphs
for Yahoo and Google:


There is an obvious correlation on Google, which shows
that body sections of a size between 50K and 60K generally rank
much higher than shorter or longer bodies. The Yahoo graph is
a bit more erratic, but also shows a nice peak at 60-70K (and
another one at 20-30K). This goes against the popular belief that
states that shorter pages rank highest. The popular belief
is shown to be completely inaccurate with this study.
Notes:
1.
For the purposes of this test, the actual body section size in
bytes was used. The page was saved to disk and then everything
before the body tag and after the end body tag were deleted. The
resulting size of the file as reported by the operating system
was used. Graphics and any other external references were completely
ignored.
2.
Over 1,000 queries and over 10,000 sites were examined for this
study.
3.
There was no exercise to attempt to isolate different keywords.
I merely took a random sampling of the queries performed by myself
and three associated during the prior month.
Conclusion:
Pages
with a body section size between 50K and 70K rank best on the
two leading search engines!
This
is merely a correlation study, so it cannot be determined from
this study whether the leading search engine purposefully entertains
this factor or not. The actual factors used may be far distant
from the factor we studied, but the end result is that this search
engine does, in fact, rank pages between 50K and 60K higher than
pages of other sizes.
Jon Ricerca is one of the leading researchers and
authors of the Search Engine Ranking Factor (SERF) reports at SearchEngineGeek.com.
For access to the other SERF reports, please visit: http://www.SearchEngineGeek.com