When do sites usually get out of the sandbox?

Discussion in 'AdSense' started by PalmIslands, Jun 9, 2007.

  1. #1
    I'm curious, its something hard to measure. How long do new sites tend to remain in their Google sandbox?

    I believe its anywhere between 3 and 12 months. Any idea?
     
    PalmIslands, Jun 9, 2007 IP
  2. yangyang

    yangyang Banned

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    #2
    That may depends on the backlinks you can get. Mostly I'd say 3 months.
     
    yangyang, Jun 9, 2007 IP
  3. jambo182

    jambo182 Active Member

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    #3
    I disagree. For highly competitive markets it can take anywhere up to 12 months to be released from the sandbox.
     
    jambo182, Jun 9, 2007 IP
  4. yangyang

    yangyang Banned

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    #4
    Wow, that's a hell of time..But still if I build , say 500 very high quality content pages, and get very high quality backlinks from .edu and .gov, is this still the case?


    :confused::confused:
     
    yangyang, Jun 9, 2007 IP
  5. Surf_Dude

    Surf_Dude Peon

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    #5
    Quote:
    "I disagree. For highly competitive markets it can take anywhere up to 12 months to be released from the sandbox."

    I find that this is true. My (highly competitive subject) site is STILL in the sandbox, after 12 months and 4 days. I have developed a sandbox testing technique which uses some "non-money" keywords on the page to check for page SERPs - all the pages are indexed. But when I search for the "money-terms", I am nowhere to be found.

    This is slowly changing. The pages with terms (cities) having the lowest search traffic (Overture measured) have been released first. About 7 out of 43 pages have been "released" (can be found using the money-words).

    The SAME is true with Yahoo - I am still sandboxed for the highest-volume, highest-priced keywords.
    My backlinks are very sparce, so getting more would probably help a lot, but I don't really know.
    Sand box, aging delay . . . call it what you will . . . it still exists, big time. No soup for you, newcomer! Maybe later.
    Old is gold. New is highly suspect. One way to limit rampant webpage proliferation.
     
    Surf_Dude, Jun 9, 2007 IP
  6. John84

    John84 Active Member

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    #6
    Ive read that it depends on how fast you collect quality links - some sites may not even be sandboxed as google doesn't want to miss out the next hot trend ie. facebook, youtube, myspace
     
    John84, Jun 12, 2007 IP