Google Ranking Tips with Pagerank ™
Google Ranking tips
By David Callan - http://www.akamarketing.com
Google is by far the most popular search engine
available today for both ordinary surfers and
webmasters.
Surfers like it because of the highly relevant
results it gives, and the speed it gives them at.
This is due to its complex text matching algorithm
and of course the Pagerank™ system that this engine
uses. More on the Pagerank™ system later.
Google is popular with webmasters and Internet
Marketing companies due to the highly workable
ranking system it uses.
Unlike other engines where information about how the
results are obtained are sketchy at best, Google
actually publishes information on it's site about
the results it produces. So webmasters have things
they can do to produce higher rankings.
What also makes Google popular with webmasters is
the speed at which they will spider / list your
site. If you are not listed in Google and submit you
are usually indexed within two weeks. If however
your site is already listed in the index Google
should reindex once every month, but more frequently
if you have a high Pagerank™.
This indexing / reindexing time is much quicker than
most other search engines, this allows webmasters to
edit their pages properties such as title, first few
lines of text, headings, keyword distribution and of
course the number of incoming links to their site.
They can then discover quickly if the changes were
successful or not.
It's because of this popularity that you need to
know the workings of the google search engine,
without knowledge of it you will be ranked lower
than all other sites that are only slightly familiar
with the Google algorithm.
So lets indulge ourselves in the Google ranking
algorithm. Well there are two main parts to the
algorithm google uses, the first is its text
matching system, whereby Google tries to find pages
relevant to what the searcher has entered in. The
second and equally important part of the algorithm
is of course the Google patented Pagerank™ system.
I'll first go through how to make your page
relevant, i.e. - the text matching part of the algo.
Google gives a lot of "weight" to the title tag when
searching for keywords. So make sure your most
important keywords or key phrases appear in the title
tag. It's seems to work best if you have other words
in your title tag too after your keywords, but try
to remain under 35-40 characters.
As many of you know Google does not use meta tags
such as keywords or description tags this is because
the text in these tags cannot be seen by visitors to
a website. And Google feels these tags will be
abused, by webmasters placing lots of unrelated
words in them in order the get more visitors.
The lack of support for meta tags means that Google
creates your description from the first few lines of
text on your page, this means you have to have your
keywords and phrases right at the top, if it finds
them your page becomes more relevant. If it doesn't
the rest of your page has to work harder to become
relevant. For example Scroll to the top of the page
where this article was originally published on
http://www.akamarketing.com and you will see:
Google submitting tips, ranking high at
google.com
The above sentence includes key phrases related to
this page. Google considers keyword density in the
body of a page for determining relevancy too, so
make sure your keywords and phrases appear a couple
of times throughout the whole page. Don't go
overboard though, a density of 6-10% seems to work
best.
Other advice about making your page relevant
includes putting keywords into the <h?> heading tags
</h?>. Also try and bold as many keywords as you
can. As of late Google seems to be indexing text in
alt image tags, so includes your key phrases in there
too.
One final tip on page relevancy is the point on
having your keywords and phrases in links which
point to your site. It is a good idea to have the
linking text contain your keywords as Google even
says itself that it analyzes pages that links come
from too, in it's description of it's pagerank
technology.
How much keyword laden links matter is anyone's
guess. But I have 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 something like this to on your links page.
Say something like "if you want to link to this
site, please use the following code".
In the above section of the article you have 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
The Pagerank™ scale goes from 1 to 10 on the Google
toolbar and from 1 to 7 beside listings on the
Google toolbar. 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. If not - 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 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 page. So the more links it has the
less of a PR boost your site gets.
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.
It's beginning to come complex isn't it, just wait
till you see this formula. Its 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 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 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.
Lets 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 / voted for from that page.
OK, I think we've had enough mathy stuff for now.
Just remember
that the name of the game is to get as many links
from pages with high PR and few other links. The
more of these links you get the more your PR will
grow and the more your rankings will improve for
your relevant keywords.
The best thing you can do for your PR seems at the
moment seems to be getting listed in Dmoz.org - The
Open Directory Project.
Pagerank™ is widely known to be biased towards big
name directories such as Dmoz.org, Yahoo and
Looksmart. This is true, especially in the case of
Dmoz.org. These ODP links are treated like gold by
Pagerank™. It doesn't even matter what the
individual PR of the category page is. I have seen
sites gain a large PR boost on the toolbar as soon
as Google updates it's directory with the latest one
from dmoz.org. This is because Google uses it's own
version of ODP for the Google web directory.
Don't believe ODP links are very important to
Pagerank™?
Don't believe a listing in the ODP will boost your
ranking?
Well they are and they will. Perform a search for
almost anything on Google and you'll discover that
75-80% of the top 10 results are also indexed in the
Google directory. The fact of the matter seems to me
to be if your not listed in ODP, you shouldn't
expect much traffic from Google.
It's not difficult, it does sometimes take time, but
it's not difficult. Just make sure you site has good
content and follow the guidelines for adding a URL.
Try to get you index page listed at least. I say at
least because although ODP claims only to list your
index page, there are plenty of sites with 5 - 10
pages listed. So if your site has very distinctive
sections, then submit each section - slowly. Once
Google updates it's directory, these listings could
do wonders for your site maximum PR.
As for Yahoo and Looksmart, Pagerank™ will usually
allocate a more than normal amount of PR boost for
any sites listed. For tips on getting listed in
Yahoo, read Yahoo Submitting Tips.
If you are a non-commercial site or have a site
that's almost completely non-commercial you can get
into the looksmart directory through www.Zeal.com. I
really love this site, just like Google obtains
results from ODP, Looksmart obtains it's
non-commercial listings from the Zeal web directory,
without Zeal I would have to fork out hard earned
cash and all my site does is provide information.
To continue - I submitted AKA Marketing.com on a
Tuesday and was listed in Zeal by Thursday morning.
On Monday I checked my logs and found lots of
referrals from Looksmart, I was in Looksmart
already. I looked at my logs later only to find MSN
had updated it's DB from the looksmart DB and was
sending my loads of visitors cause of the good
listing I got. My site was listed in Zeal, Looksmart
and MSN within six days. So get over to Zeal.com
and submit your site.
Before you can submit a site however you must pass a
member quiz, which is fairly simple and
straightforward.
If you happen to be a webmaster that has a listing
in all three of Dmoz.org, Yahoo and Looksmart then
I'm guessing your site has good to very good PR and
rankings.
RECAP
Have your main keywords and phrases in your TITLE
tag and well spread throughout your page. Get as
many links from as many high PR low number of
outbound links pages you can. GET LISTED IN DMOZ.ORG,
Yahoo and Looksmart.
Well that's it. I hope you have enjoyed this Google
Ranking tips article, as much as I have enjoyed
writing it. I also hope that you can put this advice
into use and help get yourself some real traffic.
Article by David Callan - mailto:admin@akamarketing.com
David is the webmaster of
http://www.akamarketing.com.
Visit his site for articles and tutorials focusing
on internet
marketing and website promotion. AKA Marketing.com
Also includes free ebooks, webdesign and HTML
tutorials.
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