The first Google search result (SEO?)

When a site reaches the first position in Google’s search results, Google sometimes provides sitelinks for sections of this website. For example, if you are looking for jQuery , jQuery.com are the first search results. In addition to the jQuery.com link, jQuery Documentation, Tutorials, Plugins, Download, Works, Ui, About, and Donate links are also included (all in the first listing.)

In contrast, the first Google search result for Beer returns the only link to the wikipedia.org entry for beer.

My question is, what if sites like jQuery do something to get an extended list of Google search results?

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These sitelinks are called sitelinks. Google automatically generates them as soon as your site reaches a certain threshold for page indexing and the number of indexed pages. Google Google, these thresholds and the link selection algorithm are not disclosed :)

Once your sitelinks have been identified on your page, you can view them in your Google Webmaster account . If Google has selected links that you no longer want to appear (for example, a big sale in January, which was heavily clicked before Christmas, is no longer relevant in February), you can tell Google to remove them here. You cannot yet offer links that you want to use as sitelinks.

From Google :

Links are currently fully automated. We are always working on improving link algorithms, and in the future we can enable the input of webmasters.

There are several different theories about how best to get Google to pick up your intended sitelinks, but in the end, with a well-structured layout that is easily accessible to visitors for both people and bots.

  • Create structured navigation menus using HTML features such as unordered lists (UL) and text links

  • Organize your menus to present a small number of important logical routes that visitors are likely to often choose.

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These are called sitelinks automatically generated by Google.

From webmaster tools:

Sitelinks are sitelinks that Google sometimes generates from site content to help users navigate your site. Google periodically generates these sitelinks from your site.

As we generate sitelinks dynamically, this list may change from time to time.

The sitelinks are fully automated, and we only show them if we think they will be useful to the user. If your site structure does not allow our algorithms to find good sitelinks or we do not believe that the links link to a user request, we will not show them. However, we are always working to improve how we find and display sitelinks.

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At Google, you can choose whether you can get these links (and which ones). Once assigned, the webmaster can remove some of the automatically selected links using Google Webmaster Tools ( http://google.com/webmasters/tools/ )

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