Google Knol: How I reached Page 1 on Google in 24 hours.
Written on July 25, 2008 – 4:30 pm
David Petherick, Next Web WebTipr United Kingdom

The Google Knol I created just yesterday entitled ‘How to Read the Russian Alphabet in 75 Minutes‘ is already appearing on Page 1 of a Google Search for “read russian” with 12,300,000 results following.
The curious fact that you can’t find the same content in a search within Google Knol is obviously a beta-release issue, but that’s still a pretty impressive result for content that I created and put online only yesterday. DISCLOSURE: Google say they’ll pay me from any Adsense revenue the page generates!
Well, we’ll see how it develops, but it looks like a fairly effective way to share your knowledge, get good search positions, and also perhaps make some money. Until someone pinches your content…
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By Milan Vasic on Jul 25, 2008
Don’t forget that the knol is a Google product.They probably know how to improve SEO for themselves service ;)
Very nice, I’m so impressed by Google, I have problem to find a word to describe the Google innovations on the web.
By Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten on Jul 25, 2008
Could you set up a Knol “Web2.0 for dummies” and just fill it with links to thenextweb.org and see it that works too? Spam is an obvious issue so it would be a nice test…
By david koblas on Jul 25, 2008
Why is everybody comparing this to wikipedia, it feels like it’s About.com or Mahalo in flavor. If anything it’s more of a threat to all of the editors at about.com and they should be porting their content over as fast as possible!
By David Petherick on Jul 25, 2008
Good point David - I made a very similar point on my Digital Biographer blog in December 2007 about Knol being UNLIKE Wikipedia.
See http://digitalbiographer.com/2.....e-authors/
Boris, I’ll see what I can do for Monday as regards a Web 2.0 entry, but I think that particular title is trademarked. ;-)
The issue with spam is that your Knol content is linked to an identity within Knol, so if you break the rules, it’s pretty easy to disappear your content.
By mileusna on Jul 26, 2008
Good point David, it doesn’t look like encyclopedia to me at all, at least not yet…
By Rutger van Waveren on Jul 28, 2008
David, it is known that Google prefers fresh content.
A while ago, I set up a blog and noticed that one my first posts was the nr 1 result on Google for the search term “een verslag” (Dutch for “a report”). I was pretty happy, but saw the result slip off of the first page in a couple of days.
It would be interesting if your result would still one the first page in a couple of weeks :)
By David Petherick on Aug 1, 2008
KNOL UPDATE: 1 week later, and that search puts my page in Position #7. Intersting to see that at position #8, I find my upload page on Skitch which is referenced and hold the full-size image above.
By Rutger van Waveren on Aug 1, 2008
Interesting David!
By yahoocanaday on Aug 4, 2008
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By mahjoub on Aug 6, 2008
It clearly feels like wikipedia!
By Lars on Aug 8, 2008
I dont think Google will rank Knols better than other websites, but the strength of the Google.com Domain will bring the power to rank those articles high in the search results.
But i think knols site structure and html is well designed and we could learn alot from it if we want to improve our own websites.
By stevenarenig on Aug 10, 2008
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