Paid Links
It's an eternal debate and won't be settled here but good to follow anyways. :)
You can read the back-and-forth at http://sphinn.com/story/24523.
Labels: jim boykin, paid links, sphinn, webuildpages
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Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Labels: jim boykin, paid links, sphinn, webuildpages
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
PageRank is indeed very important to Google still. It's unfortunate that toolbar PageRank has nothing to do with actual PageRank though. I think that's why debates such as this one will continue to occur.I have great respect for Jill as does the majority of the SEO community but I still have to disagree. PageRank is a factor, certainly more important than some but it is not, as Halfdeck notes, the equivalent to SEO that gravity is to human life.
"At the time of this posting there are PageRank 3's beating out PageRank 7's."I would say that titles are a factor among many. My response to your comment was based on your assertion that PageRank was to SEO what gravity is to humans. I said in my initial post that PageRank has weight, just not as much weight as it's getting credit for and certainly not what we're chasing after.
That is one of the weakest arguments against PageRank ever invented.
There are also sites that have no keywords in the title outranking sites with keywords in the TITLE element. So from that let's conclude that keywords in the TITLE doesn't matter.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&safe=off&gl=us&q=seo&btnG=SearchThat's right. PageRank is the gravity after all, do titles even matter?
keyword: [SEO]
Wikipedia.org TITLE: "Search engine optimization"
Spanish Wikipedia TITLE: "Posicionamiento en buscadores - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre"
http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&safe=off&gl=us&q=ice+cream&btnG=Search
keyword: [ice cream]
haagen-dazs.com TITLE: "Häagen-Dazs®"
bluebell.com TITLE: "MyOrganization: Home page"
So its official then. Keywords in TITLE doesn't matter.
"Really? Then why does Wikipedia (PR7 page) rank #1 and SEOMoz (PR7 page) rank #10 for "seo"?"Admittedly you caught me here. I didn't catch the word "main" in the initial post HOWEVER I would argue that it's not PageRank that's doing it, it's trust. Unfortunately we could go on that debate for the next week-and-a-half and not come to a conclusion as it would be your opinion against mine and unless someone from over at Google wants to step in and let us know ;) it will just be one person against another.
As I wrote somewhere else, the phenomenon of wikipedia ranking for just about anything and everything under the sun, in my opinion, is largely due to high link trust (most inbounds to Wikipedia are editorial, unpaid for, unreciprocated, many from trustworthy sources), sheer link power (just about every page has high TBPR due to millions of backlinks), relevant on-page content, laser-targetted anchor text on 99% of all backlinks, and internal, contextual anchor text.
"What? I have no idea what this means. A site with a PageRank 2 can have 100,000 pages in the index if the owners or contributers are very very busy people."
There, you just exposed your lack of understanding about PageRank.
A TBPR 2 site can create 100,000 pages of content, but you will not see 100,000 in the MAIN INDEX. They will sink into the supplemental bin. That should be common knowledge by now.
Read the blog links at the top of this page if you want to go beyond repeating what's been said 1,000 of times already:I'd seen Rand's previously but thanks for the other links. Rand is combining all the factors of link weighting into something called PageRank. If we reflect back to the beginning (my initial post)it might be a good time to split my reply in two. This is because there really are two conversations going on, one based on the intial article and one based on what the topic has become.
http://www.seo4fun.com/notes/supplementals.html
"Well I suppose that's it then. I suppose it's time to call up Rand Fishkin, Danny Sullivan, Neil Patel, Jill Whalen and all the other SEO's who contributed to SEOmoz's "Google Search Engine Ranking Factors" list and let them know that their work was for naught."
Oh?
I recommend you reading Dan Thies recent posts. Or read Rand Fishkin's
http://www.seomoz.org/blog/my-personal-opinion-90-of-the-rankings-equation-lies-in-these-4-factors
Where he lists "PageRank or link weight or link power" as one of the top 4 ranking factors. If you're the type of SEO to base your opinion on "expert" opinion, there you have it.
"At the time of this posting there are PageRank 3's beating out PageRank 7's."A good illustration. But this discussion started with clients obsession about PageRank. By necessity this has to be the toolbar PageRank. You're example is good and I'm certainly not going to get into a technical debate when I'm willing to say that you're theories are easily as good as mine on the exact internal calculations HOWEVER this discussion isn't about how it's calculated, it's about it's value. I don't care if I have a PageRank 11 out of 10, it where my site appears in the SERPs that I care about and, as you point out above, titles also count. I would assert that so does content, so does internal linking, so does the physical structure of the site, so does the anchor text of incoming links, so does the trusted nature of the sites linking to you, so does ...
One last thing.
Internal PageRank is a floating number, not a number between 0-10. Matt Cutts has confirmed that in several posts. PageRank is a probability metric, or a number that describes chance: 0~100%, or a number between 0-1.
If your website was the only website that existed on the web, then the chance of someone landing on your website is 100% or 1.
If there were only two pages on the web, linking to each other, the chance of you landing on one of those pages is 50%, or .5.
The sum of all PageRanks of all webpages add up to 1. Therefore, the internal PageRanks of a page is really really tiny, something like .000000000000002000195010.
Of course Google can modify that for ease of computation, but we are still dealing with alot of digits.
So what is TBPR? Some believe that they are exponents of an unknown base.
base^TBPR = internal PageRank.
For example:
10^0 = 1
10^1 = 10
10^2 = 100
10^3 = 1000
10^4 = 10000
10^5 = 100000
10^6 = 1000000
10^7 = 10000000
10^8 = 100000000
10^9 = 1000000000
10^10 = 10000000000
We don't know the base. We don't know the actual PageRank. We only see the exponent (0-10). Obviously, that's just theory. But it does help you see there's a big difference between TBPR and internal PageRank.
If you truely understood that, you would never talk about a "PageRank 3" URL outranking anything, because:See notes above and first post. This started as a post about the toolbar PageRank !!!
1) There's no such thing as a PageRank 3 page
2) You are clearly implying you know the PageRank of a page displaying TBPRX - you don't.
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
"So we'll focus on the real business and it's very clear that what we're really after is rankings, not PageRank. Once upon a time PageRank had a strong influence on rankings - that is not the case anymore."Last year I would have written that PageRank had more value. I don't quite get what you're saying as PageRank has, if anything, been declining in importance over time but to me it sounds as though you're saying that if I had said it was losing value last year I would have been right but to say it this year is inaccurate. PageRank certainly hasn't increased in importance over the past year.
This article is out of date. If it was written last year maybe it would have held some validity.
While I agree that business owners would do better to think in terms of marketing, traffic, and brand awareness instead of bulk buying high TBPR links with keyword stuffed anchor text, PageRank is and will always be to Google what gravity is to you and me.Then explain this: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&safe=off&gl=us&q=seo&btnG=Search
Authority, or high total domain PageRank (e.g. Wikipedia, with a slew of TBPR 5 deep pages), by itself may not reward you with any ranking boost, despite popular myth that authority is a dominant ranking factor.Really? Then why does Wikipedia (PR7 page) rank #1 and SEOMoz (PR7 page) rank #10 for "seo"?
But who would argue against the fact that a site that has 100,000 pages in the main index doesn't have a huge advantage over a site with 10 pages in the main index, simply because that's 100,000 pages of real estate with internal anchor text that you can use to nail highly competitive rankings?What? I have no idea what this means. A site with a PageRank 2 can have 100,000 pages in the index if the owners or contributers are very very busy people. Generally a site isn't going to get to 100,000 pages until it's been around for a long time and by then, it likely has lots of links which will undoubtedly lead to a higher PageRank. I think you put the cart in front of the horse on that one.
Deep index penetration is one of the most efficient, powerful SEO tactics. And what is the gatekeeper that keeps unpopular sites from getting 100,000 pages in the main index?
PageRank.
Should you chase after PageRank? No. But if you are trying to make the case that gravity - which you aren't conscious of - has no effect on your life then you're making an indefensible claim. Sure, you don't need to think about gravity to be able to drive a car to work. But without gravity, how will you manage to climb into your car?Well I suppose that's it then. I suppose it's time to call up Rand Fishkin, Danny Sullivan, Neil Patel, Jill Whalen and all the other SEO's who contributed to SEOmoz's "Google Search Engine Ranking Factors" list and let them know that their work was for naught. PageRank is the gravity that holds sites in the rangs (despite that fact that over all the top SEO's they averaged it at 2.4 out of 5 importance).
BTW, Toolbar PageRank (TBPR) is NOT PageRank.And here we agree. As I wrote, the lack of updating of Google's toolbar PageRank is causing many of the questions from people who have been doing link building recently but haven't noticed any increase in ages.
"If you had a thermometer that never moved"Haven't noticed much of that anywhere with the exception of some sites losing PageRank a couple weeks back and that was about it. Maybe you have a different toolbar than the rest of us. ;)
Yes bwelford, but the green bar does move. If it doesn't move for certain pages, you can either assume that the toolbar isn't being updated as it should be or you can assume that the page isn't important enough to have an up-to-date green bar. As you might have noticed, popular sites tend to have their toolbar updates before anyone else.
Monday, October 22, 2007
Labels: danny sullivan, sphinn