Hello pig-ga,
I should note at the outset that, as a Researcher for Google Answers,
I cannot speak on behalf of Google. I have no inside knowledge; I
only have the results of my research.
This research indicates that what you have experienced is a common
phenomenon. The new title will most likely appear on Google's search
results and cached version after the next deep crawl, which will
probably be in late February or early March.
The fundamental answer to your question is contained in this
information from Google:
"When you update information on your site it does not automatically
update instantly in Google's index. Rather, Google's index is updated
approximately once a month after our robots have crawled more than 3
billion web pages. This process is totally automated, so updated or
outdated link submissions are not necessary. Changes to your site's
content will be noted by the next crawl. Due to the volume of sites
in our index, we cannot manually update pages on an individual basis."
"Webmaster Info: Incorrect Listing"
Google
://www.google.com/webmasters/3.html
There has been one deep crawl since you changed the titles of your
pages; it began on January 25, 2003. (I was concerned that my
explanation would be incorrect if your had made the changes prior to
the earlier crawl on January 1, 2003; but your clarification indicates
that you made the changes after the first January crawl but before the
second one.)
"Google Update History", by Brett_Tabke
WebmasterWorld
http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum3/2657.htm
If this schedule holds true to form, the next crawl should be in late
February or early March.
But the (approximately) monthly crawl is not the only time that Google
searches for pages. Google also indicates that it "refreshes millions
of web pages every
day to ensure that Google users have access to the most current
information".
"Google Press Release: Google Offers Immediate Access to 3 Billion Web
Documents" [under heading "The Latest News and Fresh Content"]
Google
://www.google.com/press/pressrel/3billion.html
It appears that your site was visited by the daily crawl (a/k/a
"Everflux" or "Freshbot") after you changed the titles. As several
people explain in the following threads on WebmasterWorld (a site
often recommended in the answers of my fellow Google Answers
Researchers), they too had new titles or content on Google for a short
while, but soon realized that Google had reverted to the old titles or
content. The commenters in these discussions explain that changes
made by the "Freshbot" are temporary; the changes that will
subsequently be made during the monthly crawl are long-lasting.
One of these commenter (jdMorgan) notes specifically that a change to
the title or content can take up to 60 days / two months to become
permanent -- in other words, at the time of the next crawl after the
one following the change. (This accords with the information from
Google, cited above, that "changes to your site's content will be
noted by the next crawl.")
"Google Update using my old Info" (Dec 4, 2002)
WebmasterWorld
http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum3/7473.htm
"Need some answers and tips" (Nov 24, 2002)
WebmasterWorld
http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum3/7137.htm
"Refreshing Google's Cache" (Aug 5, 2002)
WebmasterWorld
http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum3/4625.htm
Here are several more discussions indicating that what you have
experienced is quite normal:
"Google Cache Update" (Dec 31, 2002)
WebmasterWorld
http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum3/8033.htm
"Google Cache Two Week Old Page" (Dec 16, 2002)
WebmasterWorld
http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum3/7751.htm
"How do I get Google to index new site title? (Nov 26, 2002)
WebmasterWorld
http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum3/7177.htm
"New cache in serps, but old title in domain.com search" (Nov 20,
2002)
WebmasterWorld
http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum3/7036.htm
"old internal pages titels re-index" (Sept 9, 2002)
WebmasterWorld
http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum3/5316.htm
There is no indication in these or other similar discussions that
Google might penalize a site by showing the old title or content
rather than the new one. It seems that the consequence of
intentionally misleading behavior is removal of the web page entirely.
As Google notes, "certain actions such as cloaking, writing text that
can be seen by search engines but not by users, or setting up
pages/links with the sole purpose of fooling search engines may result
in permanent removal from our index."
"Webmaster Info: My Web Pages Are Not Currently Listed" [scroll down
to "Other reasons", final paragraph]
Google
://www.google.com/webmasters/2.html
While Google also states here that it does "not offer an exhaustive
list of practices that can cause removal", the point is that your page
was not removed -- it is just appearing with an older title.
Moreover, the text of your home page (as well as your other pages)
does not appear to rise to the level of something designed to mislead
the search engines. (Please keep in mind, as I stated initially, I
have no ability to speak on behalf of Google.) You are describing
your service, rather than doing something like putting "jazz jazz
london jazz agency jazz" in hidden text so as to fool the search
engines. Indeed, while Google is displaying the old title in the
search results and cache, it is also displaying the text that you are
concerned about.
So I recommend that you should not worry about this situation.
Hopefully, by the time the next update is completed at some point in
the next few weeks, your new title will show up on Google.
I hope that this information is helpful.
- justaskscott-ga
Search terms used on Google:
"old title" google site:webmasterworld.com
"old titles" google site:webmasterworld.com
"old page" google site:webmasterworld.com
"old pages" google site:webmasterworld.com
"old version" google site:webmasterworld.com
"old versions" google site:webmasterworld.com
"old content" google site:webmasterworld.com
"old cache" google site:webmasterworld.com
"google update history" site:webmasterworld.com |