Posts Tagged with PageRank
February 4, 2008 at 12:53 pm · Filed under Online Marketing
Since the middle of last year, all posts about the Mac/Apple have been published directly on my new(er) Macintosh-specific blog, On a Mac.
I also recently started a new online marketing blog - Online Marketing Performance.
These blogs were started as they held two of the main themes on this blog which were intertwined with a lot of posts of a fairly random nature. I’ll continue to post to this blog, but both of the aforementioned blogs will likely bet getting more and more attention as time goes on.
Tags: AdSense, Advertising, AdWords, Affilliate Programs, Analytics, Apple, Apple TV, Beacon, Black Hat SEO, Blog Promotion, Blogging, Branding, Design of Experiments, Facebook, Facebook Applications, Facebook Platform, Facebook Platform Architecture, FBML, Google, Google Analytics, Google Labs, Google Website Optimizer, iPhone, iPod, iTunes, Mac, MacBook Pro, Macintosh, Make Money Online, Monetization, Multi level Marketing, Multivariate Testing, Online Marketing, Page Rank, PageRank, Paid Content, Semantic Search, Social Media, Social Networking, User Generated Content, viral, Viral Marketing, YahooShare This
August 19, 2007 at 10:07 pm · Filed under Content, Analytics, Online Marketing
I blogged awhile back about Google being less than excited about my blog. Since then, I’ve gotten some great advice, done some observation, and will continue to utilize my blog as an open mic as I hope to regain some respect in Google’s eyes. First things first-what’s with my incredibly disappearing PageRank?Maybe I’m overreacting to my loss of PageRank. To refresh everyone’s memories, I’ve lost my page rank for every page on my blog except my homepage, which, has the horrific rank of 2. It’s better than being blacklisted, but I’m certainly not on Google’s list of cool places to hang out. But, let me reiterate-although I’m in PageRank purgatory, I still receive the strong bulk of my traffic from Google. It’s not a lot of traffic, but the search traffic that I am receiving is highly relevant.For those of you that are new around the search engine landscape, here’s a bit on Page Rank straight from Google:
PageRank ExplainedPageRank relies on the uniquely democratic nature of the web by using its vast link structure as an indicator of an individual page’s value. In essence, Google interprets a link from page A to page B as a vote, by page A, for page B. But, Google looks at considerably more than the sheer volume of votes, or links a page receives; for example, 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.” Using these and other factors, Google provides its views on pages’ relative importance.Of course, important pages mean nothing to you if they don’t match your query. So, Google combines PageRank with sophisticated text-matching techniques to find pages that are both important and relevant to your search. Google goes far beyond the number of times a term appears on a page and examines dozens of aspects of the page’s content (and the content of the pages linking to it) to determine if it’s a good match for your query.
Sounds like PageRank is the juice—I’ve gotta have it to drive relevant traffic to my blog, right? From everything I’ve read (including claims that PageRank is actually almost completely irrelevant) I’d say, yes, PageRank is still absolutely important, maybe it is just harder to determine what my PageRank is at this exact moment.Let’s back up. How does one arrive at knowing what PageRank is assigned to any given page on a web site? Like many online marketers out there, I use the Goolge Toolbar (or a Firefox or IE extension) which pings Google HQ and reports back the PageRank of the page that is currently being viewed in the browser. This is where I’m getting the abysmal PageRanks for this blog. It’s straight from Google. I’m screwed, right? Maybe not. The quote below is allegedly straight from a Google Rep.
“The PageRank that is displayed in the Google Toolbar is forentertainment purposes only. Due to repeated attempts by hackers toaccess this data, Google updates the PageRank data very infrequentlybecause is it not secure. On average, the PR that is displayed in theGoogle Toolbar is several months old. If the toolbar is showing a PR ofzero, this is because the user is visiting a new URL that hasn’t beenupdated in the last update. The PR that is displayed by the GoogleToolbar is not the same PR that is used to rank the webpage results sothere is no need to be concerned if your PR is displayed as zero. If asite is showing up in the search results, it doesn’t not have a real PRof zero, the Toolbar is just out of date”
Too broadly paraphrase the Google Rep: don’t necessarily trust the PageRank indicator in your browser. Which, in my scenario, does feel right. Google has likely raised its eyebrows at me for moving the blog from a hosted Blogger to a hosted Wordpress blog—not because I went away from a Google product (although it did cross my mind), but because I made slight changes site-wide (including utilizing a completely different presentation template, changing the permalink structure, and moving pages—301′d or not… and I get a B- in that department, but that’s another story).For now, I’m going to move my PageRank concerns off the critical list. It would seem the PageRank tools are likely reporting well out-of-date data, so how much credence can I give it in the short-term anyway?The good news: Google reports that I’m indexed well. I am coming up in the search results. So, I’ll take that as a nod that things are OK for now. If things go south insofar as incoming traffic from Google, I’ll definitely reignite my concerns. There are, however, other things that come into play that can help my blog get more respect from Google. I’ll continue to blog about about this subject under the “Operation Gain Google Respect” heading and tag.
Tags: 404, Analytics, Content, Google, Online Marketing, Operation Gain Google Respect, PageRank, Search, Search Engine Optimization, UncategorizedShare This
August 11, 2007 at 11:42 pm · Filed under Content, Online Marketing
It’s my site, not so much me. Maybe it was never happy with it.
What would make me concerned? Well, first, I do have a reasonable level of SEO knowledge. It’s not my role directly, but it is a service that is highly relative to what I do. So, admittedly, I’m not a practitioner guru by any stretch of the imagination, but I certainly don’t think I’ve done anything remotely harmful. So, back to the question—what would make me concerned?
- The Google PageRank for my blog’s homepage is 2
Google PageRank is on a scale of 0 to 10 (there is also a “not yet indexed”). If Google knows you exist, and you aren’t being penalized for any reason, you should have a PageRank of 3.
- None of my pages beyond my homepage have any PageRank assigned to them whatsoever
- Google’s Advanced Search indicates I have one inbound link
The importance of relevant inbound links to Google is undeniable. Luckily, several web sites and blogs have picked up on posts and linked to them. However, Google is only crediting me with one when I use their advanced search and check (when I just search for smcandrew.com I come up with more than 200 in-bound links).
A little more backstory on my blog
I initially hosted a blog, on this domain, using Blogger’s hosted blog solution. My Blogger site did have more pages with PageRank, across the blog I had PageRanks of 4 or 3. I was looking for something that provided more flexibility and switched to a WordPress solution. When moving to WordPress, I did my best to make the transition smooth, and, if anything, improve my search affinity:
- I did 301 redirects for the new locations of all moved content since Blogger and WordPress’ directory and page naming schema are different
- I utilized WordPress plug-ins to populate my Meta tags (I honestly do not know how Blogger was populating them)
- I modified my page titles to focus on content (as opposed to the name of my blog)
- I incorporated a Google Sitemap, and a WordPress plug-in which updates and resubmits it automatically
I want to be in Google’s good graces. My site isn’t heavily trafficked, but of the traffic I do get, more than half is from Google.
So what did happen? Maybe it was the move from Blogger and the slight modifications I made in tags and page titling (though I’d hoped that since everything was 301′d Google would look at the ‘updated’ site and content as a good thing). Maybe it is something about how the HTML is outputted between Blogger and WordPress. I’m not exactly sure. I get SEO feedback and gain knowledge on what has upset the Google Gods, I’ll post it here on this blog.
Tags: Blog, Content, Google, Online Marketing, PageRank, Search, Search Engine Optimization, WordPressShare This