But virtually no page has
only a single link -- remember internal links are also
used in the total outbound link count -- so the value
passed to any page is 85% of the PR, divided by the
total number of outbound links.
The question now becomes
what is the PR point value of the different PR levels.
Most observers believe that the relationship between PR
levels is logarithmic rather than linear. In other words
PR5 is not worth 25% more than a PR4, but may be worth 4
to 6 times more.
It is also understood
that a PR value is not a single number, but is in fact a
range of values. So not all PR6 ranked pages are equal.
Are you looking for some inside
information on SEO? Here's an up-to-date report from SEO
experts who should know.
A 'Page Rank' is a number Google gives to a web page
that represents how important Google thinks the page is
on the web. When one page links to another, Google
considers it to be effectively casting a vote for the
other page. The more 'votes' there are for a page across
the whole web, the more important that page must be. But
that's quite an assumption, isn't it?
The importance of the page that is casting the vote
determines how important the vote itself really is,
meaning in Google calculations a page's importance comes
from the votes cast for it. These votes are then taken
into account when the page is ranked.
As a general rule of thumb, Google Page Ranks along with
Alexa ratings are the best indicators of how well your
SEO work has been going. Granted, the ranking that you
appear in on the results for your most important key
words is the real indicator, but a strong Google Page
Rank will help to boost this position substantially. The
more links that you have pointing at your site, the
better off you are. That's a basic rule that will apply
throughout your SEO operations.
Page Rank matters because it's one of the most
influential factors that determine a page's ranking in
Google's search results. If you want to have good Page
Rank, you'd better make sure people are linking to your
site.
Well, don't jump the gun and try to get your site linked
from everywhere you can, because Google doesn't count
every link. They have started filter out links from
known 'link farms' (sites that are nothing but big lists
of links), and being linked to or from these kinds of
sites will get you penalized by Google. Be careful out
there. They have also implemented a new relevance
calculator that (true to its name) tries to determine
how relevant the links into and out of your site are.
The most important factor here is that Google considers
long lasting links as more meaningful than a recently
published link.
The best way to increase your page rank is to contact
people with relevant and complementary content (that is,
content that does not compete with your own but that
enhances it). These links are most likely to last and
they will not only increase your Google Page Rank, but
they will also provide relevant hits via the links
themselves.
The more authentic information about SEO you know, the
more likely people are to consider you a SEO expert.
Read on for even more SEO facts that you can share.
How is PageRank Calculated?
Google calculates the PageRank PR of all pages it
indexes, taking into account all the links to and from
each site. When a page 'votes' for other pages by
linking to them, it shares out some of its PageRank
value amongst these pages.
This algorithm means that a link to your site from a
page with PR4 (i.e. a Page Rank of 4) and five outbound
links would be worth more than a link from a page with
PR8 and a hundred outbound links. It's not just the Page
Rank of the page that's important, but also the number
of links it has.
The more links there are on a page, the less Page Rank
value your page receives from them. You should also
remember that it takes progressively more Page Rank to
move up a level. It is generally pretty easy to achieve
a Page Rank of three. Once you achieve a Page Rank of
four, your site is getting formidable. Increasing past
this mark may prove difficult and will require very
important content. Reaching 8+ is very difficult. These
ranks are usually reserved for sites that are crucial
for the functionality of the internet.
Each time you add a link, or a page that links to you
adds a link, you run the risk of lowering your PageRank.
Make sure that you have as few links as possible, and so
do any sites that are associated with you.
Google repeats its PageRank calculatons many times at
each update, and each time the calculation is made it
gets more likely to be accurate. Total accuracy can
never be achieved, however, because one site's PageRank
is entirely relative to the others'. You should
understand that the results searchers end up with can
really only be properly worked out by Google, because
they're the only ones with access to the whole index.
Is there really any information about SEO that is
nonessential? We all see things from different angles,
so something relatively insignificant to one may be
crucial to another.
What is PageRank ? PageRank is a numeric value that
represents how important a page is on the web. Google
figures that when one page links to another page, it is
effectively casting a vote for the other page. The more
votes that are cast for a page, the more important the
page must be. Also, the importance of the page that is
casting the vote determines how important the vote
itself is. Google calculates a page's importance from
the votes cast for it. How important each vote is is
taken into account when a page's PageRank is calculated.
PageRank is Google's way of deciding a page's
importance. It matters because it is one of the factors
that determines a page's ranking in the search results.
It isn't the only factor that Google uses to rank pages,
but it is an important one.
From here on in, we'll occasionally refer to PageRank as
"PR".
Notes: Not all links are counted by Google. For
instance, they filter out links from known link farms.
Some links can cause a site to be penalized by Google.
They rightly figure that webmasters cannot control which
sites link to their sites, but they can control which
sites they link out to. For this reason, links into a
site cannot harm the site, but links from a site can be
harmful if they link to penalized sites. So be careful
which sites you link to. If a site has PR0, it is
usually a penalty, and it would be unwise to link to it.
How is PageRank calculated? To calculate the PageRank
for a page, all of its inbound links are taken into
account. These are links from within the site and links
from outside the site.
PR(A) = (1-d) + d(PR(t1)/C(t1) + ... + PR(tn)/C(tn))
That's the equation that calculates a page's PageRank.
It's the original one that was published when PageRank
was being developed, and it is probable that Google uses
a variation of it but they aren't telling us what it is.
It doesn't matter though, as this equation is good
enough.
In the equation 't1 - tn' are pages linking to page A,
'C' is the number of outbound links that a page has and
'd' is a damping factor, usually set to 0.85.
We can think of it in a simpler way:-
a page's PageRank = 0.15 + 0.85 * (a "share" of the
PageRank of every page that links to it)
"share" = the linking page's PageRank divided by the
number of outbound links on the page.
A page "votes" an amount of PageRank onto each page that
it links to. The amount of PageRank that it has to vote
with is a little less than its own PageRank value (its
own value * 0.85). This value is shared equally between
all the pages that it links to.
From this, we could conclude that a link from a page
with PR4 and 5 outbound links is worth more than a link
from a page with PR8 and 100 outbound links. The
PageRank of a page that links to yours is important but
the number of links on that page is also important. The
more links there are on a page, the less PageRank value
your page will receive from it.
If the PageRank value differences between PR1,
PR2,.....PR10 were equal then that conclusion would hold
up, but many people believe that the values between PR1
and PR10 (the maximum) are set on a logarithmic scale,
and there is very good reason for believing it. Nobody
outside Google knows for sure one way or the other, but
the chances are high that the scale is logarithmic, or
similar. If so, it means that it takes a lot more
additional PageRank for a page to move up to the next
PageRank level that it did to move up from the previous
PageRank level. The result is that it reverses the
previous conclusion, so that a link from a PR8 page that
has lots of outbound links is worth more than a link
from a PR4 page that has only a few outbound links.
Whichever scale Google uses, we can be sure of one
thing. A link from another site increases our site's
PageRank. Just remember to avoid links from link farms.
Note that when a page votes its PageRank value to other
pages, its own PageRank is not reduced by the value that
it is voting. The page doing the voting doesn't give
away its PageRank and end up with nothing. It isn't a
transfer of PageRank. It is simply a vote according to
the page's PageRank value. It's like a shareholders
meeting where each shareholder votes according to the
number of shares held, but the shares themselves aren't
given away. Even so, pages do lose some PageRank
indirectly, as we'll see later.
Ok so far? Good. Now we'll look at how the calculations
are actually done.
For a page's calculation, its existing PageRank (if it
has any) is abandoned completely and a fresh calculation
is done where the page relies solely on the PageRank
"voted" for it by its current inbound links, which may
have changed since the last time the page's PageRank was
calculated.
The equation shows clearly how a page's PageRank is
arrived at. But what isn't immediately obvious is that
it can't work if the calculation is done just once.
Suppose we have 2 pages, A and B, which link to each
other, and neither have any other links of any kind.
This is what happens:-
Step 1: Calculate page A's PageRank from the value of
its inbound links
Page A now has a new PageRank value. The calculation
used the value of the inbound link from page B. But page
B has an inbound link (from page A) and its new PageRank
value hasn't been worked out yet, so page A's new
PageRank value is based on inaccurate data and can't be
accurate.
Step 2: Calculate page B's PageRank from the value of
its inbound links
Page B now has a new PageRank value, but it can't be
accurate because the calculation used the new PageRank
value of the inbound link from page A, which is
inaccurate.
It's a Catch 22 situation. We can't work out A's
PageRank until we know B's PageRank, and we can't work
out B's PageRank until we know A's PageRank.
Now that both pages have newly calculated PageRank
values, can't we just run the calculations again to
arrive at accurate values? No. We can run the
calculations again using the new values and the results
will be more accurate, but we will always be using
inaccurate values for the calculations, so the results
will always be inaccurate.
The problem is overcome by repeating the calculations
many times. Each time produces slightly more accurate
values. In fact, total accuracy can never be achieved
because the calculations are always based on inaccurate
values. 40 to 50 iterations are sufficient to reach a
point where any further iterations wouldn't produce
enough of a change to the values to matter. This is
precisiely what Google does at each update, and it's the
reason why the updates take so long.
One thing to bear in mind is that the results we get
from the calculations are proportions. The figures must
then be set against a scale (known only to Google) to
arrive at each page's actual PageRank. Even so, we can
use the calculations to channel the PageRank within a
site around its pages so that certain pages receive a
higher proportion of it than others.
NOTE: You may come across explanations of PageRank where
the same equation is stated but the result of each
iteration of the calculation is added to the page's
existing PageRank. The new value (result + existing
PageRank) is then used when sharing PageRank with other
pages. These explanations are wrong for the following
reasons:-
1. They quote the same, published equation - but then
change it
from PR(A) = (1-d) + d(......) to PR(A) = PR(A) + (1-d)
+ d(......)
It isn't correct, and it isn't necessary.
2. We will be looking at how to organize links so that
certain pages end up with a larger proportion of the
PageRank than others. Adding to the page's existing
PageRank through the iterations produces different
proportions than when the equation is used as published.
Since the addition is not a part of the published
equation, the results are wrong and the proportioning
isn't accurate.
According to the published equation, the page being
calculated starts from scratch at each iteration. It
relies solely on its inbound links. The 'add to the
existing PageRank' idea doesn't do that, so its results
are necessarily wrong.
Internal linking
Fact: A website has a maximum amount of PageRank that is
distributed between its pages by internal links.
The maximum PageRank in a site equals the number of
pages in the site * 1. The maximum is increased by
inbound links from other sites and decreased by outbound
links to other sites. We are talking about the overall
PageRank in the site and not the PageRank of any
individual page. You don't have to take my word for it.
You can reach the same conclusion by using a pencil and
paper and the equation.
Fact: The maximum amount of PageRank in a site increases
as the number of pages in the site increases.
The more pages that a site has, the more PageRank it
has. Again, by using a pencil and paper and the
equation, you can come to the same conclusion. Bear in
mind that the only pages that count are the ones that
Google knows about.
Fact: By linking poorly, it is possible to fail to reach
the site's maximum PageRank, but it is not possible to
exceed it.
Poor internal linkages can cause a site to fall short of
its maximum but no kind of internal link structure can
cause a site to exceed it. The only way to increase the
maximum is to add more inbound links and/or increase the
number of pages in the site.
Cautions: Whilst I thoroughly recommend creating and
adding new pages to increase a site's total PageRank so
that it can be channeled to specific pages, there are
certain types of pages that should not be added. These
are pages that are all identical or very nearly
identical and are known as cookie-cutters. Google
considers them to be spam and they can trigger an alarm
that causes the pages, and possibly the entire site, to
be penalized. Pages full of good content are a must.
What can we do with this 'overall' PageRank?
We are going to look at some example calculations to see
how a site's PageRank can be manipulated, but before
doing that, I need to point out that a page will be
included in the Google index only if one or more pages
on the web link to it. That's according to Google. If a
page is not in the Google index, any links from it can't
be included in the calculations.
For the examples, we are going to ignore that fact,
mainly because other 'Pagerank Explained' type documents
ignore it in the calculations, and it might be confusing
when comparing documents. The calculator operates in two
modes:- Simple and Real. In Simple mode, the
calculations assume that all pages are in the Google
index, whether or not any other pages link to them. In
Real mode the calculations disregard unlinked-to pages.
These examples show the results as calculated in Simple
mode.
Let's consider a 3 page site (pages A, B and C) with no
links coming in from the outside. We will allocate each
page an initial PageRank of 1, although it makes no
difference whether we start each page with 1, 0 or 99.
Apart from a few millionths of a PageRank point, after
many iterations the end result is always the same.
Starting with 1 requires fewer iterations for the
PageRanks to converge to a suitable result than when
starting with 0 or any other number.
The site's maximum PageRank is the amount of PageRank in
the site. In this case, we have 3 pages so the site's
maximum is 3.
At the moment, none of the pages link to any other pages
and none link to them. If you make the calculation once
for each page, you'll find that each of them ends up
with a PageRank of 0.15. No matter how many iterations
you run, each page's PageRank remains at 0.15. The total
PageRank in the site = 0.45, whereas it could be 3. The
site is seriously wasting most of its potential
PageRank.