Why search engines scare the crap out of me
I’ve had Mint installed on my website for a while. I like the up-to-the-minute stats, so I can sit there and watch the page refresh every 2 minutes and see the numbers change.
I’ve also known about MintPopularPostsWP for a while, but I’d never used it before. It uses Mint to determine your most popular posts by page views instead of the number of comments. (Way more accurate!) Notice I have the list of popular posts in my sidebar now.
One of the things that has blown my mind about my blog is that second third most popular post being so popular. My Big Nerd Ranch posts get a lot of traffic because they linked to my blog as a review of the class I took, but that doesn’t explain the other post’s abnormal popularity. I didn’t write a lot of iPhone posts after my trip to the Ranch, so it’s not the general focus of my blog anyway; I’m known more for my WordPress stuff. So how does this post pull traffic from any remotely related Google search for this iPhone code?
Well, it happened through the magical algorithms that search engines use to determine ranking. The more hits a page gets, the more reputable it is to a search engine, and the higher it goes on the list. The higher it goes on the list, the more hits it gets. The more hits it gets, the higher it goes… and so on. Somehow my page became the #1 search result on multiple search engines (check out the images below).
I’m not trying to brag or complain here. It’s just really weird that a blog about WordPress programming gets the majority of its search traffic from one little iPhone development post. Don’t get me wrong—traffic is good—but this little quirk is also responsible for my blog’s high bounce rate.
Anyone else have a weird search engine experience to share?
- Yahoo!
- Bing
- Lycos





