User: Password:
   Keep me logged in.
Register  |  I forgot my password
Advanced Search
Web Directory l Web Links l Website Advertising l LinksGeek.com  - Article Details

How Google Distributes PageRank

Date Added: March 17, 2009 11:01:26 AM
Author: Jessica Navarro
Category: Advertising: SEO Consulting

In the SEO arena there is a lot of attention paid to PageRank as an indicator of a domain's SEO value. Although it is one of the most important aspects of a domain's worth in the eyes of Google, there are a few details that should be understood. Google gives each page on the web a value and when one web page links to another it passes some value onto the page it is linking to. This is true for both external and internal hyperlinks. Pages that don't have any PageRank are often referred to as having N/A PageRank.The higher the PageRank, the more likely Google is to trust it. First of all, for anybody who doesn't know what PageRank is - it is a metric used by Google to determine how important a domain is based on analysis of hyperlinks. Google PageRank has 11 values, between 1 and 10. In addition, pages that have a lot of low PageRank and PageRank N/A hyperlinks pointing to them can have their PageRank reduced as a result. So, if a web page has 4 PageRank 4 and 3 PageRank 3 links pointing at it, it will probably be give a PageRank of 4. PageRank is generally not assigned to a page higher than the pages that link to it. Probably the most important factor in the assignment of PageRank to a web page is the PageRank of the web pages linking to it. The higher the PageRank of pages linking to a given page, the higher its PageRank is likely to be. The sheer quantity of links does not help to increase PageRank. A website can have a high PageRank with relatively few links pointing to it if those links are of a high PageRank. Some people suggest that the text content of the page affects PageRank assignment, but this doesn't seem to be the case. There is no substantiated evidence that text affects PageRank other than pages that have been spammed often have their PageRank removed. When it come to sub-pages, time is a factor in PageRank assignment. When new sites first get given PageRank their sub-pages often remain without any PageRank. In general, sub-pages are somewhat slow to get give PageRank. Google is generally less trusting of sub-pages unless they belong to a trusted domain. In particular websites with a lot of sub-pages and even more so sites that link to a lot of internal pages (like directories) can really struggle to pass their PageRank to internal pages. The architecture of the site has a major role to play in the assignment of PageRank. Google uses what is known as block level analysis to analyses web pages. They use their vast knowledge of the architecture of the web to decide what links on a page are probably the most trustworthy and the pages these links point to are more likely to receive PageRank. Google can and do modify websites' PageRank. This is generally as a penalty for sites that have used unhonest practices. This can often cause all the site's sub-pages to loose their PageRank. It has also been claimed that in the past Google has made mistakes in PageRank distribution. Last but not least, the PageRank of a web page may change even when there has been no change in the hyperlinks pointing to that page. This is either due to changes in the structure of links between all websites or modifications made by Google.

Ratings
Comments

No Comments Yet.


You must be logged in to leave a Comment.