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    Beanstalk's SEO News Blog

    At Beanstalk Search Engine Optimization we know that knowledge is power. That's the reason we started this SEO blog. We know that the better informed our visitors are, the better the decisions they will make for their websites and their online businesses. We hope you enjoy your stay and find the SEO news contained within this blog useful.


    November 14, 2012

    Google’s New ‘AuthorRank’ Bigger than Panda and Penguin Combined

    If you are in the SEO industry, you have probably a new buzz word floating around the water cooler; “AuthorRank.”
    AuthorRank signals image
    In August of 2005, Google filed a patent for a technology dubbed Agent Rank in which ranking ‘agents’ use the reception of the content they create and the resulting interactions as a factor in determining their rankings. The patent goes on to suggest that more well-received and popular “agents” could have their associated content rank higher than unsigned content or the content of other less-authoritative “agents”.

    After adding a continuation patent in 2011, Google is now able to attribute content to specific agents and can now rank these agents thanks to platforms like Google+. AJ Kohn goes into much detail about AuthorRank and why he feels it will be bigger than Panda and Penguin combined. AuthorRank will not be a replacement for PageRank, but will work in conjunction with it to enable Google to rank high quality content more appropriately.

    I certainly don’t claim to be an expert on AuthorRank and in fact am only learning about it as I write this. What I did learn from the information I read is that content has and will always been key to the success of any website. Google’s mantra to publishers has always been that “content is king”; provide high quality content and the ranking, and followers will follow. This new signal will be in place soon as a final coup de grace to those still stuck in antiquated methods of content creation and syndication.

    SEO news blog post by @ 10:59 am

    Categories: Google,Google,Google+
    Tags: ,

     

    October 7, 2011

    All I’m Going To Say Is …

    Alright, no it’s not.  For those of you who are watching your PageRank using one of the myriad of tools available (SEO Quake, Search Status, etc.) you may have noticed that the bar is grey.  Google has not discontinued PageRank, they’ve just moved it’s reference URL and most tools have yet to adapt.  You can expect updates soon from most of them I’m sure.

    This issue was first spotted by (go figure) Dave Naylor.

    So rest easy, we’ll all have a little green bar to continue to stare at. :)

    SEO news blog post by @ 11:14 am

    Categories: Google
    Tags: , ,

     

    December 31, 2008

    Buggy Google Pagerank Update

    I’ve heard from several clients today who had their page ranks change both for the better, and worse (my own hardware website went from a PR5 to a PR4). However it seems that a re-occurring bug where Google drops the page rank of internal pages that deserve to be ranked has snuck into this update. After most page rank updates I usually check out one of the previous employers websites to see how their page rank distribution is. Currently of all their pages the homepage, and two of the categories pages have page rank the rest of their website reports as being unranked so not even a PR0. Hopefully we will see a corrective page rank update in the next few weeks.

    SEO news blog post by @ 5:42 pm

    Categories: Uncategorized
    Tags: ,

     

    September 22, 2008

    All I’m Going To Say Is …

    I could write a long blog post, in fact – today it’s going to be over 1000 words. That includes the fact that it has an image and that image is, of course, worth 1000 words.

    I happened to be looking through some news on Beanstalk (good to check how people are talking about you periodically) and found one that pointed to a past blog post I wrote on PageRank and a discussion I got into on Sphinn about it). But it’s not the discussion that I found humorous this evening – it’s the AdSense.

    The full post (which you can read here if you’re so inclined) was on a PageRank debate. Here’s an image of what I saw as far as AdSense on the page.

    Poor AdSense relevancy.Take a peek at those AdSense ads.

    All I’m going to say is, relevancy anyone?

    SEO news blog post by @ 11:42 pm

    Categories: Uncategorized
    Tags: ,

     

    July 18, 2008

    Rand Explains PageRank

    Rand Fishkin, CEO of SEOmoz takes some time to explain PageRank as it was when it first came about vs how it is today. Admittedly, it’s greatly simplified in this video BUT it’s probably the most easy-to-understand explanation I’ve heard to date and covers the changes in the system well. For those of us watch the PageRank on our homepage and internal pages it we’ve likely witnessed a lot of what he’s taking about.

    To candy-coat it even more, Rand covered the explanation as part of his Whiteboard Friday series so you don’t even have to read. :) Here’s the video:
    http://www.vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=1360917&server=www.vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=&fullscreen=1
    SEOmoz Whiteboard Friday-Has Pagerank Changed? (visit for the comments) from Scott Willoughby on Vimeo.

    SEO news blog post by @ 1:31 pm

    Categories: Uncategorized
    Tags: , , ,

     

    January 17, 2008

    Google PageRank Update January 2008

    This morning while checking some of my personal project websites I noticed a few had some extra green in the pagerank bar than normal. Most of these sites are rather fresh out of the box and were previously either a page rank zero or unranked. This comes as a surprise since the last update was not too long ago. At first I decided to look around and see how far this update had infected the data centres. Other SEO and SEM users have been reporting similar trends on many different search news sites. As of this writing the update appears to have affected mostly young sites and a handful of larger ones. This is definitely not a slap like the big penalty update at the end of 2007. As with all updates the search results are shifting around as we entertain another google dance.

    On the contrary there is at least one large spanking that has certainly taken place. Technorati has been stripped of all it’s pagerank leaving them with a pagerank zero. There are only a few sub pages that have held pagerank: Entertainment, Sports, Popular, Help (which is a sub domain) all still have something higher than a zero.

    It would seem despite popular myth that the green bar is not going anywhere anytime to soon. The web master radio show today features a segment regarding this update. I suspect that another blog post will follow this one with more information and details.

    SEO news blog post by @ 1:42 pm

    Categories: Uncategorized
    Tags: ,

     

    November 16, 2007

    But Our Butts Were Still Red !!!

    And Another Google PageRank spanking.Well the dust hasn’t even settled yet on the three PageRank updates we were graced with in October and Google’s launched another volley and a vast number of sites lost some (or more) of those little green pixels.

    In our preliminary analysis there appears to be a bit more to it than the gaining or losing of some visual PageRank (mainly losing it appears at this point). In a chat I was having with Jim Hedger earlier when we were comparing notes both of us agreed that we’ve seen some shifting in the rankings over the past few days and both of us expect to see more in the near future (and by that I mean within the next couple days).

    From Jim’s observations a lot of the sites affected have had some association with SEO/SEM firms though may not be involved directly in the industry or sell links. I haven’t seen that myself as some non-SEO related sites got the hard smack (again?) but an observation worth noting while we seek common trends in what’s going on.

    Now, lets be clear – what appears in the green bar is not a particularly relevant reflection of the value of a site or it’s ability to rank highly (used to be – not anymore). That said, with all these major changes going on one can only assume that this is indicative of other changes in the way sites will be ranked. Or Google’s just messing around with us for fun or because the rumors are true and they’re going to dump the whole thing altogether and they want us to be thankful for it by the time it happens. :)

    To be sure we’ll be watching this carefully over the weekend and over the upcoming days and weeks (and months, and years …) and we’ll keep you posted as we have more time for analysis. Some useful reading and placed to keep watching are:

    • here of course :)
    • AndyBeard.eu - Andy has been following this closely since October and is reporting on it well. He brings up some great points in today’s post titled ZERORANK. One of my favorite points is one I’ve griped about before, that there’s no way to request reinclusion to Google without “admitting” that you did something wrong to begin with. Well what if you were actually penalized incorrectly?
    • DigitalPoint Forums – A discussion on the subject.

    So a thought for Google to close out the blog for the weekend – next time, please wait until our butts have healed from the first spanking before launching into the next round. :)

    SEO news blog post by @ 5:08 pm


     

    October 30, 2007

    Here We Go Again …

    Well is was an enjoyable 12 hours but the folks over at Google are up to it again and the visible PageRank (that green bar) is on the move once again. This latest round appears to be an effort to correct some of the wrongs (basically, to give PageRank back to those that shouldn’t have lost it). This leaves me with a big question, if we didn’t see any change in the rankings and the site’s aren’t selling links then who cares?

    While I don’t put stock in what the green bar tells me, it is of course interesting to monitor what’s going on (and of course to consider what must be happening at the text link brokers). Bought a PR7? Might be a PR3 but is it worth the same $30/mth you were paying? ;)

    So all I can really recommend to our valued visitors is to do the same as I am (and this is coming from a guy who’s site went from a 6 to a 4) … relax, drink some Chai tea and check your rankings. They probably weren’t affected and so in the end … who cares? :)

    And so from there I’m going to meander onto a new topic and one that’s a lot more interesting – branding vs. marketing vs. advertising. Sometimes it can be very difficult to tell the different between one and the other and so I was happy to see that Neil Patel (apparently as funny as he is smart) posted a GREAT post to illustrate the difference. You can read it on his blog here.

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:59 pm


     

    October 29, 2007

    But … It Was My Brother !!!

    Today I feel sorry for my kids. Every parent reading this will remember those times when they heard a loud BANG and assumed incorrectly who had done it. TELI !!!

    “But it wasn’t me !!!”

    A couple days later the milk’s spilled all over the place. KAEMON !!!

    “But it wasn’t me !!!”

    Well now I know how they feel.

    I got into work this morning, launched my browser. When Firefox loads it starts with 4 tabs, one for each of the major engines and a second datacenter for Google – all with our primary phrase preset for easy reference. All looked right in the world. Then I went to our blog. It took a second to realize that the little green bar had changed. What was once a 6 was now a 4.

    Hmmmm. This sometimes happens when the PR of the last page I was at holds so let’s go to the homepage. OK, now the homepage in a new window. OK, let’s try a different browser altogether. OK, now it’s time to stop – You’re a PR4.

    What could I have done “wrong”? I don’t sell links. I had couple paid links but I got rid of any that weren’t producing some decent traffic ages ago so really I was using text links to buy traffic. Surely Google of all people can’t have a problem with that. I did have a few outbound links from our left nav on our homepage but they weren’t paid for – they just pointed to resources such as SearchEngineWatch.com. You know, resources I really did feel worth passing a vote for. Meanwhile there are sites I can see up against me that I can confirm buy links (and some that sell them) that actually attained increases in toolbar PageRank (though we still beat them in the SERPs so … :) So why do I lose toolbar PageRank and my brother doesn’t?

    Well, for anyone who read my now ironic though well-timed blog rant from last week on PageRank you’ll know that while I might be obsessed with search engines and I might be obsessed with Google, I care a lot more about where a site appears in the SERPs than I do about a little green bar.

    A lot of sites have been blasted in the last couple rounds of PageRank updates. Here are some blogs and forums where you can go for discussion on this topic:

    A simple search on Google’s Blog Search Engine (should I rel=”nofollow” that just to be cheeky? – you’ll notice …. I didn’t ;) for “pagerank update” will provide you many more hours of reading.

    Good luck to you all as this continues. Maybe in the end my wishes will come true – the green bar will go away and we’ll all be stuck building links for relevancy and judging our results by our rankings. For some reason the Beatle’s “Imagine” is running through my head. :)

    And Google, just so you know – I wasn’t selling links … it was my brother.

    SEO news blog post by @ 3:25 pm

    Categories: Uncategorized
    Tags: , ,

     

    October 24, 2007

    The PageRank Debate Continues Over At Sphinn

    Yesterday I published a rant about PageRank. The post picked up some steam and was well read on Sphinn. And then there was Halfdeck. For those of you who read my subsequent post you’ll know that Halfdeck is a Sphinner who whole-heartedly disagrees with my stand on the issue of PageRank.

    After he read my reply he posted again as did Jill Whalen. As I don’t allow comments in the Beanstalk blog (this is simply because I don’t have time to moderate them) I’ll post their replies here as well as mine to their comments. Their comments will be in blockquotes:

    Jill:

    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.

    Halfdeck:

    “At the time of this posting there are PageRank 3′s beating out PageRank 7′s.”

    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.

    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.

    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&safe;=off≷=us&q;=seo&btnG;=Search

    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≷=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.

    That’s right. PageRank is the gravity after all, do titles even matter?

    Actually I view titles as more important than PageRank. About equal from an SEO standpoint but more important in that a clickable title will get, well, clicked on more in the SERPs. But IT’S STILL JUST A FACTOR AMONG MANY!!!

    I think this is perhaps what’s being overlooked from my initial post. At no point did I say that PageRank was irrelevant. What I said is the the average person tends to give it too much importance (comparing it to gravity for example). It is a factor and it does carry weight but there are other factors and a low PageRank site can beat out higher PageRank sites if they “win” in the other factors.

    “Really? Then why does Wikipedia (PR7 page) rank #1 and SEOMoz (PR7 page) rank #10 for “seo”?”

    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.

    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.

    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:

    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.

    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.

    The initial argument based on the first post:

    My intial arguement was based on people who email us/call us asking and obsessing about PageRank (why theirs isn’t higher, what we’ll do to increase it, etc.) This is obviously a discussion about toolbar PageRank. I don’t think any of us has had to deal with questions about why a site’s PageRank isn’t higher where they weren’t referring to the toolbar PageRank. It would be funny if we did though. “I know the green bar shows my PageRank is a 4 but I know it’s really a 5. I don’t care what the toolbar shows, what will it take to get a PR 7?”

    What the argument has become:
    The argument has now become how much PageRank influences results, and we’re not talking about toolbar PageRank. One thing I would like to know is if you’re counting PageRank as something other than what the toolbar shows when updates are happening (i.e. when there’s isn’t internal updating going on affecting results based on factors we can’t see) or if you’re actually referring to the toolbar PageRank when it’s accurate (i.e. right after an update).

    If you’re referring to the toolbar PageRank (when accurate) then I am going to continue to disagree with you and will continue to maintain that PageRank is nothing more than a factor among others. That said, from some of the links and examples
    you’ve given it appears you may be referring to PageRank as something more than in which case this conversation has gone off on a major tangent. As shoudl be clear from my initial post, I am referring to the visually displayed PageRank that appears in the toolbar when the toolbar is updated.

    “At the time of this posting there are PageRank 3′s beating out PageRank 7′s.”

    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.

    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 …

    PageRank is not gravity, be it toolbar PageRank or internal PageRank. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, it’s a factor – more important than some, less important than others.

    If you truely understood that, you would never talk about a “PageRank 3″ URL outranking anything, because:

    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.

    See notes above and first post. This started as a post about the toolbar PageRank !!!

    SEO news blog post by @ 11:44 am

    Categories: Uncategorized
    Tags: , ,

     

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