How do search engines actually find and rank websites?

Search engines are like super-smart librarians who help you find your favorite books, but for websites instead.

Search engines have two main jobs: finding websites and ranking them so the best ones show up first. Let’s break it down.

How search engines find websites

Imagine you're playing hide-and-seek in a big park. You look everywhere to find your friends, behind trees, under benches, on swings. Search engines do something similar. They use robots (also called crawlers) that explore the internet like little detectives. These robots follow links from one website to another and record what they find. It’s like taking notes so they can remember where everything is.

How search engines rank websites

Now imagine you're picking your favorite book from a shelf. You might choose the one with the coolest cover, or the one that sounds most interesting. Search engines do something similar when they rank websites. They look at things like how many people visit a website, what words are on it, and even how fast it loads. The best websites, the ones that match your search the most, get to be on top of the list.

So, every time you type something into a search engine, it’s like asking a super-smart librarian to find the best book for you!

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Examples

  1. A robot walks around the internet to find websites and remember their content.
  2. Websites are like books in a library, and search engines help people find them quickly.
  3. Some websites get picked more often because they're better organized.

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