Google: Low PageRank & Bad Spelling May Go Hand-In-Hand; Panda, Too?

If your website and/or web pages have low PageRank, it’s possible that they also suffer from poor spelling and grammar. Google’s top spam cop, Matt Cutts, made the correlation between low PageRank and poor spelling in a Google Webmaster Help video just made public today. In responding to a question about whether spelling and grammar […]

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bad-spellingIf your website and/or web pages have low PageRank, it’s possible that they also suffer from poor spelling and grammar.

Google’s top spam cop, Matt Cutts, made the correlation between low PageRank and poor spelling in a Google Webmaster Help video just made public today. In responding to a question about whether spelling and grammar matter when Google evaluates site quality, Cutts says:

“We noticed a while ago that, if you look at the PageRank of a page — how reputable we think a particular page or site is — the ability to spell correlates relatively well with that. So, the reputable sites tend to spell better and the sites that are lower PageRank, or very low PageRank, tend not to spell as well.”

Here’s the full video; those comments above come at about the :30 mark.

As to the actual question about using spelling and grammar when evaluating sites, Cutts says those aren’t currently used as a “direct signal” for search ranking, but says “I think it would be fair” to use them in that way. (He also explains in some detail the challenges involved in determining what is/isn’t good spelling.)

How Does The Panda Update Fit In?

This should come as no surprise if you’ve been paying attention to Google’s announcements since the Panda algorithm rolled out back in February.

Google’s been very clear about the fact that overall site quality and usability is part of what Panda is looking at, and they even included “Does this article have spelling, stylistic, or factual errors?” as one of 23 questions that webmasters should ask themselves in relation to the Panda changes. Other related questions were, “How much quality control is done on content?” and “Was the article edited well, or does it appear sloppy or hastily produced?”

In the video, Cutts also mentions that Google has studied ways to determine the reading level of content on the web and says that kind of analysis “would be pretty interesting to explore as a potential quality signal.”

And, in fact, Google has added a reading level filter to its search results.

google-reading-level

Correlation is not causation,” as the saying goes, but all of this together is certainly another SEO factor for webmasters to think about in the post-Panda world.

(Stock image via Shutterstock.com and used under license.)

Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Matt McGee
Contributor
Matt McGee joined Third Door Media as a writer/reporter/editor in September 2008. He served as Editor-In-Chief from January 2013 until his departure in July 2017. He can be found on Twitter at @MattMcGee.

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