Google Ranking Tips - Part 2
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Page
Ranking
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One final tip on page relevancy is the point
on having your keywords and phrases in links which point
to your site. It's a good idea to have the linking text
contain your keywords as Google even says itself in its
description of its Pagerank technology that it
analyzes pages that links come from.
How much keyword laden links matter is anyone's guess. I
have however noticed a lot of sites which give the HTML
code to visitors who want to exchange links do include
keywords in the actual linking area. You should do this
too on your links page, say something like "if you
want to link to this site, please use the following
code". The code would of course have your most
important words in the actual link text and your less
important words in the accompanying description of your
site.
Google Pagerank
In the above
section of the article you've learned what areas Google
uses and looks at when looking for a relevant site, but
what method does Google use to determine which site is
better, the answer is the Pagerank system.
Pagerank is as the name suggests a ranking system of
pages. It works on the basis that if a website ABC.COM
has been linked from a website XYZ.COM, abc.com must have
some good content and therefore Google will count the
link from XYZ.COM as a vote for ABC.COM. You can check
your Pagerank on Google by downloading the Google toolbar
from http://toolbar.google.com
The Pagerank™ scale goes from 1 to 10 on the Google
toolbar and from 1 to 7 beside listings in the Google
directory. A less important site is of course a site with
a PR of 1 and a very very important site is a site with a
PR of 7 or 10, in the directory or toolbar respectively.
The more links or votes a site has the more important it
must be and therefore the higher it will rank for search
words which it is relevant to, right?, WRONG!.
Google does not simply count the number of incoming links
a page has, if that was the case every webmaster from
Iceland to Vietnam would try and exchange links to every
Tom, Dick and Harry website that would let them. In
Googles own words:
"Google looks at more than the sheer volume of
votes, or links a page receives; it also analyzes the
page that casts the vote. Votes cast by pages that are
themselves "important" weigh more heavily and
help to make other pages "important."
Hopefully your beginning to get the idea. The idea is to
have your page linked to by as many high quality and high
pageranked sites as possible. Right? RIGHT and WRONG.
WRONG BECAUSE, you see the Google Pagerank system
also takes into account the number of links the page that
has linked to you has. The reasoning for this is that a
page X has a certain amount of voting PR, if your site Y
is the only link from that page X, then Google feels
confident that page X thinks your page Y is the best link
it has and will give you more PR. If however page X has
50 links, page X could think your only the 50th best
link. Hence the more links a page has the less of a PR
boost your site will get.
RIGHT BECAUSE, linking to a site with a 6+ PR will
provide a significant boost to your PR in most cases, but
in cases where the site also links with 100 other sites
the boost will be almost zero. Likewise if a site has a
PR of just 2 but you and only one other site are linked
from it, then the PR boost would be more than the site
with 100 links and a PR of 6.
Google Pagerank formula
It's
beginning to come complex isn't it, just wait till you
see this formula. It looks scary for non math's people.
First let me
explain what the damping factor is. The damping factor is
the amount of your PR which you can actually pass on when
you vote / link to another site. The damping factor is
widely known to be .85, this is a little less then the
linking pages own PR.
PR(A) = (1-d) +
d(PR(t1)/C(t1) + ... + PR(tn)/C(tn))
In layman's terms PR(A) is
the Pagerank boost your page A
will get after being linked from someone else's site
(t1). PR(t1) is the pagerank of the page which links to
you and C(t1) is the amount of total links that (t1) has.
It is important to know that a pages voting power is only
.85 of that pages actual PR and this voting power gets
spread out evenly between all sites it links to.
Imagine http://www.akamarketing.com was linked by
XYZ.COM's link page which had a PR of 4 and 9 other
links, here's how the formula should look like:
PR(AKA) = (1-.85) + .85*(4/10)
PR(AKA) = .15 + .85*(.4)
PR(AKA) = .15 + .34
PR(AKA) = .49
To sum up my site would get an injection of .49 PR after
being linked from a page with a PR of four and 9 other
links.
Let's say I was linked from a site with a PR of 8, double
the previous example's amount, which had 15 other links,
a total of 16 outbound links, my boost would be:
PR(AKA) = (1-.85) +.85*(8/16)
PR(AKA) = .15 + .85(.5)
PR(AKA) = .15 + .425
PR(AKA) = .575
The above two worked examples show that not only is the
PR of the linking page important but what is also
important is how many other sites are also linked to from
that page.
Continue with Part 3
Back to Part 1
About
the Author
Article
by David Callan - admin@akamarketing.com
David is the webmaster of http://www.akamarketing.com.
Visit his site for free articles and tutorials focusing
on Internet marketing and website development issues.
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