Tuesday 22 September 2009

The Idiot’s Guide To Google Page Rank

Article by Duncan Carver:

In this article I’m going to try and provide an “idiot proof guide” to explain how Google “Page Rank” works in layman’s terms.

It’s best done through an analogy so imagine that your website’s home page is a bucket.

To gain and/or increase your Page Rank you need to fill up your bucket.

This is done by getting as many incoming links pointing to your website’s home page as possible.

The amount of Page Rank those links are going to fill your bucket with (your resulting PR value) is directly related to the Page Rank of the pages those links are on (and how many other links those pages also contain).

So for example if you have a link on a page that has a PR value of 6 – that link is going to pass less than 6 measures of page rank value into your home page.

It’s not going to pass exactly 6 measures because…

1) Chances are there are many other internal and external links on that same page where by the page rank value 6 is being shared amongst and distributed to all of the links in varying amounts.

2) Every time page rank flows out of one of those links Google actually “evaporates” a small proportion of that value. As a result, even if you have the only link on the page, you’re not going to have exactly 6 measures of PR value passed through to your home page. There is a specific reason why Google does this but it’s not really important in the context of this article.

So now that you’re filling your bucket with Page Rank value by continually building incoming links, let’s look at what happens when that collective Page Rank is distributed through your entire website.

Imagine that for every page in your website (that you link to internally), you’re essentially adding a brand new hole in your bucket.

The page rank value then starts dissipating through that hole and a certain proportion of the total value that your home page holds is now being passed down to that page (and the total value that your home page retains is slightly lessened). This is fine because it happens naturally – it’s entirely normal to link to other pages in your website.

However, the more pages you have in your website, the more holes you now have in your bucket and the less PR value your home page will retain. Further, this also means that each of those pages is going to receive less page rank unto themselves as your home page PR value is now being spread amongst all those pages.

Let’s say you have 1,000 incoming links to a websites home page and that home page has a PR value of 5. Let’s also say you have 10 additional pages in your website that you’re linking to via your internal linking structure. If you have a “strong PR5″ then it’s possible some of those other internal pages would also become a PR 5, but more likely than not, most will become PR4 or less.

Let’s take the same website, with the exact same number (and quality) of incoming links. This time we’ll add 100 pages.

Now that PR 5 value is flowing down your internal linking structure and being shared amongst 100 other pages. It’s possible that your home page might now become a PR4 (because you have more holes in your bucket) and those internal pages achieve PR values of 3 or less (because each one is receiving less share of the total available inflow of page rank).

The above is not a bad thing either, and the flow of Page Rank through your website is not linear. That is most people link back to their home page from every other page in their website. That means that although you are passing Page Rank down to all of your internal pages, a small proportion of the value is being actually passed back to your home page via those home page links. This is also why the home pages of websites tend to have the larger PR values rather than internal pages.

Similarly, most websites are setup to have a major category structure that contain a few key areas of organized content. More often that not, those links are also placed on most internal pages via the standard navigational linking structure.

The end result is that those pages will have greater PR values – rather than a page that is found 3 links removed from your home page. For example the home page might be a PR5, the category page might be a PR4, and the page linked to from that category page might be a PR3 or less.

That basically means that the pages you link to most often from within your entire website are going to receive the highest PR values.

Knowing this – if you want to increase Page Rank and have a lot of pages in your website you have 2 options.

Increase the number of incoming links to your website and focus on incoming links from pages that already have high PR values.

Decrease the amount of internal pages of your website. Of course this isn’t really an option. I just mention this because often people wonder why they start loosing page rank for no apparent reason and they don’t realize it will happen if they continually add more pages without increasing the amount of (or quality of) incoming links to the website.

To take things one step further, now imagine that for every external link you include on your website (that means linking out to another independent website) you’re also adding more holes in your Page Rank bucket. The flow of PR is now being shared amongst your internal pages and a proportion is now being lost through those external links. So the more external links you include on your website – the more page rank you’re website is going to “leak” out to other websites.

Again this is not really a bad thing – it’s also entirely natural to link out to other websites and you shouldn’t be scared to do so.

You can also mitigate the impact of leaking page rank to other website by using the “nofollow” attribute on those external links if possible.

So that is the basic “jist” of how Page Rank is gained, passed around, and lost through your website. If you’re interested there are pleanty of rather technical and specific explinations of Page Rank out there online, but hey this is the “idiots guide” and the above sums it up quite nicely if I do say so myself.

What’s most important to realise here is that having high Page Rank is not the be all and end all of obtaining high search engine rankings.

In fact, there is no direct correlation between having high PR valued pages and having high search engine rankings.

You can read more about that here.

Ultimately, all having a high Page Rank value does is to ensure Google visits your website more often to look for new pages and for any updates made to older pages. Not only that but it will also “crawl deeper” into your internal linking structure and index more pages faster, and more often.

So it can help if you want to see your websites changes become reflected in the search engine faster and speed up the end result of making any internal search engine optimization tweaks…

“We crawl (the internet) roughly in order of page rank. The higher your Page Rank the faster you will be found, the deeper you will be crawled and the more often visited…” ~ Matt Cutts.

I hope that was easy enough to follow ;-0

Duncan Carver - http://www.onlinemarketingtoday.com

Wednesday 9 September 2009

Google and Back Links

Useful info from Duncan Carver
"Hey Duncan, Why does Google not show any back links while yahoo and others do? Secondly, I have news releases, YouTube videos and quality articles with reputable ezine distributors and Google has not picked up any of those links either? The site is relatively new and it got hacked last month and was off line for about a week so there might be done issues there. Cheers," ~ Keith Rispin

Hi Keith,

Google only ever shows a "random sample" of incoming links to individual websites.

They did used to show all links but back in about 2004/05 they stopped doing this because it was too transparent to webmasters vying for the same rankings.

Anyone could see exactly what they would need to replicate in their own link building campaigns, in order to achieve similar search engine rankings as the existing top ranked website/s for the respective keyword terms they were targeting.

All other factors remaining equal (a similarly well "on-site" optimized website) a competitor could simply get the exact same linking structure completed and stand a very good chance of ranking in the same (or very close) position of the website whose link campaign they were "reverse engineering".

Obviously this was not in the interest of Google as it allows webmasters to manipulate their search engine results - so they stopped doing this and went the "random sample" way.

So now if you use the... link:yourdomainhere.com ...search command in Google you're only ever going to see a very random sample.

If you're not seeing any links showing in the results, it doesn't mean Google doesn't know about them (and isn't taking them into account when determining where your website ultimately ranks in the index), it just means it's not showing them to you.

As to how they determine this "random sample" I'm not 100% sure.

Generally they tend to show slightly more of the links from "authority websites" (but not all), mixed in with other random links you've managed to secure.

What I do know is if you know you have several thousand unique incoming links to a website, Google is only going to show a few hundred of those.

Another way to get a better idea as to what Google knows about is to use the search command of your own domain name (without the www. prefix). This will not show backlinks as such, but every reference to your website. For example; someone might have
written your domain name on their page but it might not actually be a hyperlink.

In doing this now on a website I operate (that I know as fact has more than 5,000 unique incoming links pointing to it - the majority from unique 3rd party websites), when using the link:search command, Google is telling me there are "about 213"
incoming links.

When I simply search on the domain name itself (without the www.prefix) it shows there are "about 143,000" individual references to that domain within Google's index. Again not all of those are going to be links - but it gives you a better idea as to how
deeply referenced your website actually is within Google.

Obviously you cannot use either of those search commands to get benchmark statistics of competitor's websites anymore - it's become hard to reverse engineer other link building campaigns simply using Google's standard search capabilities. It used to be
nice to be able to see that a website holding a top ranking for a specific term had 1,000 incoming links pointing to it because it gave you an estimate to work towards.

MSN.com (the new bing.com) stopped showing backlinks altogether (not even showing a random sample) back in 2007. Their public reasoning was that there was no need to use extra resources to deliver the results of such search queries because it was not the
"general internet population" searching on them. Of course "privately" this was due to the same reason Google stopped showing all incoming link results as well (webmasters doing competitive SEO analysis).

Yahoo.com has always been more accurate in doing this and generally showed all incoming links making it the best benchmark for comparisons. However just a few weeks ago they announced they would be using the new Bing.com (old MSN) search results in a
partnership deal. Only time will tell if this means they will no longer show backlinks and simply serve up an exact replica of bing.com results and functionality.

So all in all, if you're not seeing any backlinks in Google, but you know you have incoming links pointing to your website, don't worry too much about it. Just get out there and focus on building more incoming links to improve search engine rankings.

As to your website being offline for a week - that's never a good thing but wouldn't be the likely cause - and your incoming links from other sources not showing, well that's explained above.

Chances are you just don't have enough volume at present.
~ | ~

If you're looking to purchase text link advertising, and have a minimum budget of $1,000 p/m please contact me right now...

Duncan Carver - admin@onlinemarketingtoday.com