Search engines rank websites based on how well they match what people are looking for.
Imagine you're at a big library with thousands of books. When you want to find a book about dinosaurs, you look at the title and maybe the cover to see if it’s about what you need. Search engines do something similar, they look at websites to decide if they’re good matches for people's searches.
How Websites Are Checked
When someone types in a search like "best pizza in town", the search engine checks many websites. It looks at things like:
- What words are used on the website (keywords)
- How easy it is to read and understand
- How fast the website loads
If a website has lots of good keywords related to pizza and loads quickly, it might show up higher in the list, just like how you might pick the book that looks most interesting first.
Why It Matters
Websites want to be high on the list because more people will see them. It’s like being the first book someone picks from the shelf, they’ll read it and maybe even tell others about it!
Examples
- A kid wants to find a pizza place, so the search engine shows the closest one first.
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See also
- How do search engines like Google rank websites for relevance?
- How is social media evolving into a search engine?
- How do search engines rank websites for relevant results?
- The World's Search Engine: A Deep Dive into Bing
- How do search engines like Google rank websites for results?