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How is PageRank used?
- carefully explained and what you can
do with it - written by top SEO experts
PageRank is
one of the methods Google uses to determine
a page’s relevance or importance. It is only
one part of the story when it comes to the
Google listing, but the other aspects are
discussed elsewhere (and are ever changing)
and PageRank is interesting enough to
deserve a paper of its own.
PageRank is also displayed on the toolbar of
your browser if you’ve installed the Google
toolbar (http://toolbar.google.com/). But
the Toolbar PageRank only goes from 0 – 10
and seems to be something like a logarithmic
scale:
|
Toolbar PageRank
(log base 10) |
Real PageRank |
|
0 |
0 - 10 |
|
1 |
100 -
1,000 |
|
2 |
1,000
- 10,000 |
|
3 |
10,000
- 100,000 |
|
4 |
and so
on... |
We can’t know the exact details of the scale
because, as we’ll see later, the maximum PR
of all pages on the web changes every month
when Google does its re-indexing! If we
presume the scale is logarithmic (although
there is only anecdotal evidence for this at
the time of writing) then Google could
simply give the highest actual PR page a
toolbar PR of 10 and scale the rest
appropriately.
Also the toolbar sometimes guesses! The
toolbar often shows me a Toolbar PR for
pages I’ve only just uploaded and cannot
possibly be in the index yet!
What seems to be happening is that the
toolbar looks at the URL of the page the
browser is displaying and strips off
everything down the last “/” (i.e. it goes
to the “parent” page in URL terms). If
Google has a Toolbar PR for that parent then
it subtracts 1 and shows that as the Toolbar
PR for this page. If there’s no PR for the
parent it goes to the parent’s parent’s
page, but subtracting 2, and so on all the
way up to the root of your site. If it can’t
find a Toolbar PR to display in this way,
that is if it doesn’t find a page with a
real calculated PR, then the bar is greyed
out.
Note that if the Toolbar is guessing in this
way, the Actual PR of the page is 0 - though
its PR will be calculated shortly after the
Google spider first sees it.
PageRank says nothing about the content or
size of a page, the language it’s written
in, or the text used in the anchor of a
link!
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