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Actually - I just checked it again now as I write this and things look back to normal in the top 100... perhaps they are having some issues today?
some sort of glitch
I've seen both authority and rank change back and forth in the matter of hours. Probably a problem with multiple databases, but regardless: it's annoying.
Technorati is yet another useless metric.
What metric do you actually care about?
Subscribers to a newsletter? Loans closed? Technorati is meaningless not because it's inaccurate but because it doesn't do anything actionable for you. Will it make you money, build your community, improve the world? Nope.
I appreciate this column. I asked myself the same question and I'm not sure my authority is on a measurable scale.
And at the end of the day, the answer came down to what the previous commenter said. "Technorati is meaningless not because it's inaccurate, but because it doesn't do anything actionable for you."
Quibbling a bit with syntax, I think its inaccuracy leads to it being inactionable. And even if accurate, like he says, can you translate authority into payment or influence?
Thanks again. And thanks for the newsletter link/notice this morning.
As an example, I just hit refresh on my own blog's page on Technorati. My rank went from 460,000 to 520,000. For a page refresh. That just makes no sense. Authority I guess is a worthwhile measure, but even so I've little real interest in technorati any more.
Authority = the number of links you have received in the past 6 months. Probably why the number doesn't move very much.
Ranking = the number of links you have received as compared to every other blog that Technorati tracks. So, if there is a sudden surge of links to other blogs, it might cause your blog to fall in the rankings, but not in the authority, because the number of blogs linked to you is still the same.
That's my theory and I'm sticking to it. If anyone else can verify this theory, I would appreciate it!
In the end, the metrics you need to track are results. But will the web ever come up with a tool that gives us at least a *little* bit of comfort? Where's the FDIC for the web?
I now use a combo of 5 or so metrics in order to determine a blog's "authority," with Technorati merely "assisting" me in blog discovery.
There is no way to even predict how Technorati will behave anymore - but like you, I still keep an eye on the numbers. Old habits die hard.
G
The rankings do tend to fluctuate early and often. The best way to use it is to watch how it trends over time. The earlier 1,800 rank was no doubt a hiccup.
As for authority, the problem is that some blogs are rarely updated. Church of the Customer literally hasn't been updated in months. I can't remember if they have been updated this year, actually.
Keep in mind that Technorati also doesn't track links to your blog from Twitter. But on the flipside, it does track links to your Twitter account. Chris here's the link for yours:
http://www.technorati.com/blogs/www.twitter.com...