Improved Search Engine Rank: Google Page Rank Misconceptions

Posted on January 25th, 2010 in Google | 2 Comments »

Improved search engine rank is attainable through good search engine optimization, part of which is the maximizing of your Google Page Rank through intelligent linking with other web pages. In this first part of 2 on the subject of Google Page Rank, we will look at the argument for attaining high listings through a linking strategy.

Google Page Rank is a buzz term at the moment since many believe it to be more important to your search engine listing than search engine optimization. If we ignore for the moment the fact that Page Rank is, in itself, a form of SEO, then there are arguments for and against that belief.

Before we investigate these arguments, let’s understand some fundamentals of search engine listings. First, most search engines list web pages, not domains (websites). What that means is that every web page in a domain has to be relevant to a specific search term if it is to be listed.

Secondly, a search engine customer is the person who is using that engine to seek information. It is not an advertiser or the owner of a website. It is the user seeking information. The form of words that is used by that customer is called a ’search term’. This becomes a ‘keyword’ when applied to a webmaster trying to anticipate the form of words that a user will employ to search for their information.

A search engine works by analyzing the semantic content of a web page and determining the relative importance of the vocabulary used, taking into account the title tags, the heading tags and the first text it detects. It will also check out text related contextually to what it considers to be the main ‘keywords’ and then rank that page according to how relevant it calculates it to be for the main theme of the page.

It will then examine the number of other web pages that are linked to it, and regard that as a measure of how important, or relevant to the ‘keyword’, that the page is. The value of the links is regarded as peer approval of the content. All of these factors determine how high that page is listed for search terms that are similar contextually to the content of the page.

Without doubt, there are web pages that are listed high in the search engine indices that contain very little in the way of useful content on the keywords for which they are listed, and have virtually no contextual relevance to any search term. However, a careful investigation of these sites will reveal two things.

The first is that many such web pages are frequently listed highly only for relatively obscure search terms. If a search engine customer uses a common search term to find the information they are seeking, they will very rarely be led to a site that has little content other than links, but it is possible. The second is that they contains large numbers of links out to other web pages, and it can be assumed that they have at least an equal number of web pages linking back.

It is possible to find such web pages for many keywords. An example is on the first page on Google for the keyword ‘Data VOIP Solutions’. There is a website there that is comprised only of links. The site itself has little content, but every link leads to either another website that provides useful content, or another internal page full of more links and no content. That is how links can be used to lift a web page high in the SE listings.

Such sites frequently contain only the bare minimum of conventional search engine optimization, but the competition is so low that they gain high listings. You will also find them to contain large numbers of internal pages, every one of which contain the same internal and external links.

It is true, therefore, that it is possible to get a high listing without much content, but with a large number of links. However, is that a legitimate argument for those promoting links against content? Could you reasonably apply that strategy to your website? Could a genuine website really contain thousands of links to other internal pages and external pages on other websites, and still maintain its intended purpose?

In the second part of this article, titled ‘Search Engine Rank: Google Page Rank Misconceptions’ wI will explode some myths about Page Rank, and explain how many people are wasting their time with reciprocal links, and perhaps even losing through them. It may be that a linking strategy is not so much an option, as a choice between the type of website that you want: to provide genuine information or to make money regardless of content.

Improved search engine rank might be synonymous with Google Page Rank, but perhaps only if you want to sacrifice the integrity of your website.

Peter normally has his websites listed on Google, Yahoo and MSN within two days, and consistently gets high search engine listings. His website http://www.improved-search-engine-rank.com/improved-search-engine-rank.html>Seocious shows how to combine Page Rank and SEO to achieve this.

[Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post 

Are you Doing This to Increase your Google Page Rank?

Posted on January 22nd, 2010 in Google | 2 Comments »

I receive a number of emails from people who are customers and a lot who are not, but could use some advice on how to increase their website`s Google page rank.

So, because my time is limited, and I can not answer the hundreds of emails that I receive, and since today is the start of the New Year, I am beginning my series on tips and tricks for increasing your Google page rank.

I think you will enjoy this series, and most importantly use the tips and tricks I provide to help your website take off.

Lets start with the basics in this series and that is what exactly is the Google page rank and why is it important. The Google page rank or in short called the GPR, is method by which Google ranks the popularity of a website and/or pages on a website. This ranking is handled through Google`s unique and highly classified computer algorithm.

Through this algorithm Google is able to rank and return search results of websites based on what a user enters in the Google search textbox.

Studies and statistics have shown the higher you appear on the search list, the greater chance someone will click the resulting link. For example, lets say you do a search on sneakers and a company comes up as the first link to click. Studies have shown the first link receives the most clicks, followed by the second and so on. The resulting search list was determined by the ranking that combined with the search criteria. The higher your rank as compared to other web sites that meet the same search criteria, the higher your placement will be.

Your goal as a web owner or website administrator is to increase your Google page rank so that your site will appear higher when someone does a search that will meet the criteria of your site.

I know this is a lot of broad based information, however this series will fill in all the gaps and answer all of your questions. I promise. Also feel free to ask me any questions to be answered in a future article in this series.

Now that you know some of the basics, lets get to our first tip. How do you begin to increase that Google page rank?

Start with link exchanging. A link exchange is the matter of you agreeing to post a link on your website pointing back to another website who will do the same. Google looks favorably upon a website when other sites point to it. The more links you have pointing to your site the better off you will be and be able to increase your score.

Keep these few tips in mind when exchanging links. A link exchange is not about your visitors clicking the link to go to another website or vice versa. So do not think that because your link is on another website you will start getting all of their traffic. Chances are you may get some, but that is highly unlikely. The idea is to obtain as many websites as possible to point back to your website (usually your home page) to increase your rank.

Two, keep a separate page of your links. Your website should have a page called links where you display the information of all the websites you have exchanged links with.

Three, your links page should be accessible from your home page so that the Google crawling spiders can find it. That is looked favorable upon.

Four, last but not least, never have more than 50 links to other websites on a given page. Anything over 50 links to a page and Google sees that as being a link farm, and decreases the score of those links. Once you reach 50, start a new links page, and then link the next link page from the first page. Continue this same process for each new links page you need to create.

For example, our website has exchanged links with over 3,500 websites. So we have over 70 pages of links. This of course was done over a period of time, and has increased our page rank tremendously.

In our next article in this series, we will talk about how exchanging links with websites that have already established a sizable Google page rank, has greater benefits.

By: Bruce A. Tucker

About the Author:Bruce A. Tucker is the Associate Director of http://www.Indocquent.com, an online resource that allows businesses and individuals to post their products and services for sale in 20,000 cities throughout 200 countries around the world.If you wish to exchange links with Indocquent.com visit their link area online at: http://www.indocquent.com/index_files/links.pl.

[Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post 

Page Rank Transfer From an Old Site to a New Site – Search Engine Optimisation

Posted on January 18th, 2010 in Google | 2 Comments »

When moving from an old to a new website it is extremely important to consider the old sites existing organic search engine position. If the correct strategy is not undertaken then the old sites position in the search marketplace could be dramatically compromised. It’s important to gain an understanding of two specific areas of the old site before undertaking a strategy:

1) The existing listing saturation: This is the number of pages which have been listed, cached and indexed within each of the major search engines. Each page listing will be producing a level of visitor traffic, each associated to different groups of keywords and search terms. It’s essential to make sure existing page URL’s remain the same or old URL’s are directly mapped to the new site. Making sure that every page directly maps to its new version.

2) The existing link popularity: This is the number of pages which form one way links back to the old site or where the old site has been directly referenced by another website using a hyperlink. These include 3rd party websites, directories, social media sites, articles, news and review websites etc. The Links form the basis of the sites popularity, and page rank. It’s essential to make sure that all links remain live and point to the same active page weather new or old.

Both of these areas are directly related to the old sites existing search engine presence and performance. If a strategy for moving and maintaining these links is not put in place before the DNS is transferred to the new site, it is possible that the new site will receive a massive drop in Page Rank, Trust Rank and listing saturation. It can take up to 6 months to recover from this type of situation and unfortunately there would be a percentage of links to the site which will be lost forever.

There are two main strategies which can be used to prevent this from happening and to maintain the sites online presence:

1) To use all existing URL strings, page titles and meta data in the formation of the new site and its pages. The content, page titles and meta data can be improved or adjusted but the relevance of each page will need to be maintained. With the creation of most new site upgrades, this is the most practical way forward and is more time efficient. As the site and its pages will appear the same to the search engines but just upgraded (i.e. the page URL is identical, but the page content and files sizes will be different.), page rank, link popularity and link saturation will be maintained and transferred to the new site. The search engines will notice a difference in page size, files sizes and file names etc. This should improve search engine interest, as they will believe that the content has been updated, as this is across the entire site it will increase robot visits and should lead to the site listings being updated. This should mean that any new pages will be picked up and indexed fairly rapidly.

2) All of the old websites pages are indexed and mapped to their counterpart pages on the new website using a 301 redirect (permanent redirect) and Mod-Rewrite. In most cases each page will have its associate page rank transferred to the new mapped page, but this is not always the case and it will take some time. Quite often search engine listings will initially drop in rank, as all of the site will appear new and then start to increase once the page rank is transferred. Some pages lose their page rank and popularity and it’s difficult to predict the reason behind this. Inbound links from 3rd party websites will be mapped to the new pages of the website using this strategy. Associated page rank will be transferred to the page but this will not be immediate and may take some time, anything from 1-3 months, depending on the linking sites importance. If possible it would be worth contacting link partners and directory sites in order to change the associated URLS. This can be a difficult and time consuming process and as a result it is sometimes more time and cost efficient to continue the sites ongoing search marketing strategy using the new URLS.

In order to help promote the indexing of new pages it will be essential to create regular XML sitemaps (Monthly or when the site has new content added.) and to submit them directly to the search engines, giving them a complete guide of the entire sites page structure.

Creative SEO provides the following services: Search Engine Optimisation, Search Engine Marketing, Social Media Marketing, SEO UK, SEM UK, PPC Managment, Search Engine Marketing Consultancy and much more….

[Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post 

New Methods to Improve Your Page Rank

Posted on January 17th, 2010 in Google | 1 Comment »

It’s getting tougher and tougher to rank in search engines for certain keyphrases. In one sense this is good news: it means that when you plug a keyphrase into Google it means that you won’t get a garbage site. Google doesn’t toughen up its algorithm for calculating page rank just to make site owners suffer: it’s about quality control. This being said, there are news ways to improve your site’s page rank to help you site adapt to the Web 2.0 environment and beyond.

As Google updates its policies, certain practices have become outdated: such as article marketing. It used to be that you could upload the same article to a slew of article directories – either manually or using an article submission service – and you could build up hundreds of inbound links when the article went into syndication. Now Google will discard all of the duplicates and keep one: not even necessarily the one with the highest page rank. This can still bring in traffic from different article sites, but it cannot improve page rank.

Blog commenting is another one that has lost some of its usefulness. A lot of new site owners have never heard of the concept of nofollow. The nofollow tag is a tag put on links that looks like rel=”nofollow” tag. So the code would end up looking like: < a onClick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(’/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”http://www.yoursite.com” target=” rel=”nofollow” >. What this will do is ensure that Google spiders will not follow the link to your site: i.e. it will not affect page rank. Again, the link can improve traffic, but not your page rank.

Better Methods to Increase Page Rank

With these common pitfalls out of the way, what are some good ways to improve page rank given Google’s new criteria.

1. Identify Nofollow links. Firefox, for example, has a dofollow plugin that will reveal which links on a site are dofollow or nofollow (blue for dofollow, red for nofollow). This is a good way to test a site’s comment section. There are also dofollow directories, which link sites that have nofollow deactivated.

2. Write unique article content. It may be difficult to write ten different posts about the same topic, but it’s recommended. You can then upload ten different articles to ten different article sites. Ten quality backlinks is much better than one. More time put in = more page rank value.

3. On your blog, don’t just write basic information that may be covered elsewhere. Write topically: these are the articles that are the most likely to go viral. People like new news, not a new version on an old topic – however well-written it might be.

4. Get yourself the Google Adwords tool to determine the most marketable keywords in your niche: put these keywords in a title tag and content, without overdoing it. These older SEO tactics still work. You’d be surprised just how many sites still have a title that include a number, not the title of the post.

5. Register with Google Webmaster tools: it will reveal any problems with your HTML code, such as broken links. It will also help with faster spidering of your site.

6. Become a social networker. One thing that is overlooked about social networks is their page rank. It’s not just about traffic from the network. Your Digg link could rank very highly for an important title and post – well before your own site. The more social networks you belong to, the more chance one of those results will show up in SERPs. These links will also improve the page rank of internal pages of your URL – very important to overall page rank health.

7. Become an avid forum poster. Just having a link to your site in your forum profile and signature is helpful – but the more active you are in the forums, the more page rank strength you will send to your profile. Forum signatures are also great for traffic. See tip #1 for revealing which forums use nofollow or dofollow links.

8. Manually add your site to directories. It’s tedious but it’s still important for your page rank. Don’t rely on automated systems because a barrage of site directory links all at once can get you red-flagged by Google. Also, important: write different keywords and site descriptions before submitting your site. If you use the same description over and over this can be seen as duplicate content.

Finally, you should have a plan for all of the above strategies. Even if you have a modest goal of only five new links a day: through comments, directories (there are thousands of potential directories), forum posts, and so on, this will build up over time. By the time of the next Google page rank update, which occurs every three months or so, you will see positive results of your public page rank climbing higher.

The SEO Wordsmith is an advanced SEO copywriter and online marketer. Read daily tips for improving website performance at the SEO Wordsmith blog (http://www.seowordsmith.com) and SEO reviews at the SEO Wordsmith Marketplace (http://marketplace.seowordsmith.com).

[Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post 

What is the Google Page Rank All About?

Posted on January 16th, 2010 in Google | No Comments »

When talking about search engine optimization, it is almost impossible not to stumble upon the phrase: Google page rank. This term is without doubt very important to webmasters who want to obtain a good ranking and a lot of traffic, but why? Well, by simply understanding how the mathematical formula at the heart of the PageRank (PR) is calculated, any webmaster can influence its website’s Google listing.

Google page rank is one of the methods this search engine has of evaluating the relevance of a web page. The toolbar PR consists of a number between 0-10 which can be easily seen if you have the Google toolbar installed. If you don’t have this toolbar, then visiting quickpagerank.com will allow you to easily check page rank. This website is very easy to use and supplies much more information than the Google toolbar. By simply typing the URL of your site and clicking the “submit” button, you will be able to view your Google page rank, Alexa rank, whether you are listed in Dmoz or not, backlinks showing in major search engines and results coming from AltaVista and the entire web.

PR is short for the Google page rank which is calculated by Google and can range from 0.15 to billions. It represents a “vote” of appreciation or support for a certain website from all the rest existing on the web. It therefore can be zero or a very high number given by the number of links pointing to a site from all the rest. The formula from the original Google paper looks like this: “PR(A) = (1-d) + d (PR(T1)/C(T1) + … + PR(Tn)/C(Tn))” and the symbols represent the following: A – the page for which we want to check page rank, T1…Tn – the pages which are pointing to it through links, C(A) – the number of links coming from page A and pointing to other sites and d – damping factor usually set at 0.85. As you can see the calculus is quite difficult and this is because it doesn’t stop here.

It seems quite impossible to calculate how exactly Google page rank is assigned to a certain page because the PR of a page depends on the PR of all the pages pointing to it. This leads to circle calculations as the PR of those pages pointing to let’s say page “A” also have to be calculated and this is done depending on other sites with their own PR. In addition, Google reevaluates websites periodically re-indexing new links and new pages, all updated and better optimized. Its job is quite difficult, but thank god it’s a machine that’s doing it and not a human!

So, the conclusion is that Google page rank is too difficult to analyze. Entire pages have been written on its algorithms and a lot of intelligent minds have struggled to find out the undisclosed mathematical intricacies of the PR. All we know are the simple facts that Google listings are influenced by links, among which one way links prove to be more efficient. Therefore everyone strives to optimize their websites as much as possible for keyword searches which are performed by Google spiders all the time. After doing their best, webmasters turn to check page rank.

A really interesting aspect related to Google page rank is that Google’s listings don’t always show the sites which have the highest PR in their top findings. This is a puzzling fact. To check page rank has become an undisputable habit for webmaster that do their best to promote their online business and obtain more traffic. Sometimes, their main purpose for optimization is to obtain a high Google page rank, but perhaps this is not the perfect approach for Google’s ranking system. Of course, PR is very important, but since we don’t know for sure how to obtain it, perhaps it would be wiser to do our best to improve website quality and promote them by using only the given facts. So, don’t forget that popularity is the key to success! And, after investing in quality, to best analyze your efforts, you should also constantly check page rank and see how things are going from Google’s point of view.

Don?t forget that quickpagerank.com is a valuable tool for SEO. By simply typing in the desired URL, you can check page rank, backlinks and positioning in major search engines easily. To verify that your optimization has not been in vain, you should not forget about Google page rank!

[Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post 

Known Facts About the Google Page Rank

Posted on January 13th, 2010 in Google | No Comments »

Site owners are on the hunt for the green numbers on the Google page rank toolbar. That’s no secret, but do they all really know what Google page rank is about? How much should you really worry about your online business before you check page rank results? Information is the key to obtaining traffic and becoming the best in a line of business. But not many people pay attention to the numerous articles and websites that offer valuable data on how a site should be made and promoted.

Google page rank represents the basis of Larry Page’s and Sergey Brin’s search engine’s system of calculation. It is only a little part of how it really works and proves that Google’s fame and attention is not random, but obtained due to the quality of its searches. Google is the best search engine currently available and its efficiency is not equaled by any other existing search engine. Webmasters looking to evolve know that the Google page rank is the one who gave it its surplus of query validity and accuracy.

The value of a website on a certain keyword or key phrase (usually typed in by a user) is determined by the way that site is linked to other more or less valuable sites. In turn, those sites are evaluated by Google using the same criteria. In a few words, the whole process resembles a complex web, a combination of variables which are constantly and continuously changing.

When you check page rank, the number you read reflects a current status which might already be changing. Because the Internet consists in so many websites that are updated daily and because so many new pages and links constantly appear, Google needs to make updates as well. These updates can be seen once 2 or 3 months when the “Google dance” takes place and when all new variables have to be taken into consideration. Of course, the process takes place all the time, but only then are we able to see its results through the change of the Google page rank.

If you are interested in how well your site performs when it comes to such an evaluation, you should seriously consider these aspects before you check page rank again: links pointing to your site, the Google page rank of the sites that contain these links, the anchor text of the links and the on-site optimization (meta tags, tags, titles, description, keyword density for site content). As you can probably see, this means there are a lot of aspects involved in page ranking. Many things are controllable and web development companies take care of them in a professional manner. Webmasters are very careful with how they optimize their sites, for example. They carefully observe their Google page rank and constantly seek to raise the number shown by the Google toolbar. Some things are however, uncontrollable. If someone chooses to post a link to your site on his own site which is poorly optimized, his action might have negative effects on yours.

The Google page rank is a very sensitive issue which concerns a lot of webmasters who want their website displayed among the first results Google offers web surfers on certain keywords. Some don’t find it satisfying just to check page rank evolution in time. If for some reasons unknown to them, their Google page rank is modified, even for a short while, PR paranoia can set in. Some optimization methods can even be considered damaging because the PR the webmasters were observing has suddenly changed. The Google page rank is important, but must not be taken that seriously. Google constantly makes changes because the Internet itself is daily enriched with new information. Its spiders crawl up and down the web and their findings can have an effect on your site as well.

Errors can occur, like the very famous “spoofing” effect when a new page can borrow the Google page rank of another better ranked page to which it is connected. But errors can be corrected and so can the result you find when you check page rank. Good PR can turn bad because of a mistake, but it can also turn better just as fast. Your main worry should be to offer valuable information to your targeted public and do so by using the available optimization techniques provided by specialized companies. To regularly check page rank is not a bad practice. It is necessary to keep in touch with how Google sees your site. This is why we recommend using quickpagerank.com, a site that supplies valuable information about ranking in major search engines as well as number of backlinks pointing to your site.

Don?t hesitate to improve your website because this will also affect your Google page rank. Optimization and a close look on the number of links pointing to your site can increase the traffic you receive. Our website provides a wonderful optimization tool which allows you to constantly check page rank evolution and some of the aspects that lead to its boost, like backlinks.

[Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post 

Building Links to your Website for Page Rank

Posted on January 4th, 2010 in Google | No Comments »

The amount of quality links pointing to your website determines the popularity of your websites with many of the search engines, so it is very important to obtain quality links. However, you need to know where your website stands in the search engine rankings in order to see how much work you need to do to increase and maintain that popularity rating.

Another way to build links is through free content creation or free article submissions. When creating your website you will need to fill your site with fantastic content and make updates so other sites want to link to your site. Search engines are now smart enough to know that content is related, so, links from relevant sites are more important then links from sites which are irrelevant.

The assumption still is that if a site has valuable content or services to offer that other webmasters will link to that particular site. Most importantly, work on your content for natural linking from other websites. It is hard to get one way links but if you have good content that goes far beyond other sites people will want to link to you, it is still harder to get one way links than it is to get reciprocal links.

Since page rankings is very important to the major search engines, and links influence this, it is important to create a game plan on how to build links to your site. A well laid out plan will help in establishing the overall link plan and strategy to drive traffic to your site. As time goes on your site will grow and your page rank will get better and you will have better chances securing quality links. As you website continues to grow and build in popularity you will need to quality links from other sites pointing to your site to keep your rankings. Link building never stops, if you stop link building and other sites stop linking to you, you could possibly lose your ranking on the search engines.

The amount and quality of links you need will depend on the competitiveness of the keyword phrases for which you are optimizing. If you put in the time and work on your link building efforts over time you will see results in the long run.

Article directories work with many different partners and by writing articles your articles can show up on many different sites. Your best bet in these times is to write articles and submit it to article directories. By using article submission services and directory submission services you are able to increase your ranking to your website, by submitting you are creating one way links back to your site.

Using automated tools are not link farms, the reason for this is because you decide who you want to trade links with each and every week. Continue building quality links and you will see that in time it will all pay off.

Getting the one-way link is more difficult to obtain than reciprocal links, but the pay off will come if you get solid long-term links and you will see the search engine ranking results increase.

David Marc Fishman is the owner of www.linknetics.com and article submission site The link marketing software that promotes link exchange

[Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post 

What is Google Page Rank

Posted on January 3rd, 2010 in Google | No Comments »

We often hear of Google Page Rank and this topic is imminent in most Internet Marketing forums. We know higher Page Rank means that the website or blog is of some quality but what is Page Rank? and How is it determined?

Page Rank(PR) is a tool that Google uses to determine a sites quality and effectiveness. It is determined by the number of quality backlinks a site has. What is determined as a quality backlink?

Link building is the most trickiest part of SEO. Most website and blog owners go about link building by the reciprocal link method. It simply means both sites links to one another, so a fair and win-win situation for both parties. Each of these links carries a different weight which is determined by their Page Rank.

If your site is of PR 3 and you link to a site of PR 5 and this site links back to you, then the weight of the link from the PR 5 site to your site is higher than the weight of the link from your site. This is because the link which is pointing to your site is from a PR 5 site which Google have already determine to be a quality and important site to them. The weight of that link can be higher if the PR 5 site that linked to your site is of the same content as your site. Google rates link of the same content to be more higher and important than from a link of a different content.

The limitation to reciprocal linking method is that when a site has too many links that points to other sites. This effects the weight of the link. When you link to a site of this type, even when the PR are the same and your site has only two links pointing out from your site, then the weight of the link you receive is lower.

The best is still a one way link and this carries much more weight than reciprocal links. If you inject real quality content and very useful resources to your site, then eventually your site will achieve this.

Internet Marketing Consultant and Editor of http://imarketingexpert.blogspot.com

[Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post 

Google Page Rank – Why Does it Matter Anyways?

Posted on January 2nd, 2010 in Google | No Comments »

The popularity of Google can be gauged from the fact that the Oxford dictionary included it in its directory as a term that refers to the search mechanism. Since its inception, Google has changed the way people search for information online. Though a late entrant in the field, it has become the most popular search engine on the World Wide Web. This was primarily because of its superior performance, ease of use and high quality of results. In fact, with time Google has grown more than just a search engines. It enjoys unparalleled authority on the internet and its results determine the success or failure of a website in the cyberspace.

Google Page Rank
One of the factors that Google uses to rank web documents is the Page Rank. Google PageRank if a numerical figure on the scale of 0 to 10, 0 being the least and 10 being the highest figure that denotes the quality of the website.

What Determines the Page Rank?

Keyword Density
One of the prime methods that determine the ranking of websites on search engine results is its relevance for the searched query. The frequency of occurrence of the search phrase on the website is what decides where it will be placed in the search engine results page. The occurrence of the search phrase is measured with respect to the length of the web document. This is known as keyword density. The more the keyword density, more will be the relevancy of the website.

However, it should be noted that blatant keyword stuffing would not work. Google knows how to identify these malpractices and penalizes websites for the same. The idea is to disperse keywords strategically along the web document so that the content makes sense at the same time is rich in targeted keywords.

Link Popularity
Another factor to gauge website popularity is to actually determine how popular the website is on the Internet. This can be seen by counting the number of web pages linking to the concerned website. The numbers of links that point to your website tell about how many of them think that your website is worth. The number of inbound links determines the importance of a website and is called its link popularity.

Inbound links is not only measured by the quantity of links to your website but also with the quality of links. If your website has 100 links from malicious or low PageRank websites, it would not be better than having 10 links from high PageRank established websites. Link popularity is another important factor that determines the PageRank of a website.

Content Quality
The quality of content that is uploaded on the website plays yet another important role in determining the PageRank of the website. In fact, this is a preceding factor for link popularity itself. If the content on your website is fresh, original and informative then more and more visitors will visit and websites would want to link to you. This increases your link popularity and soars your ranking on Google.

However, make sure that the content you update is original. Google penalizes website for plagiarized content.

Maneet Puri is a professional web technician and owner of LeXolution IT Services, a web design India company that deals with outsource web design services. It caters to its clientele by providing them with services like website design & development, website maintenance and website administration.

[Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post 

Google Page Rank optimization – quick look

Posted on December 30th, 2009 in Google | No Comments »

When i launched my site I thought it would be a big task to optimize my site ranking in googlesearch engine. But its not that hard trust me. I will be picking up points which will will help you in your sites ranking optimization. Here i go :

Before buying a domain


Always check which domain you are buying. Never buy a domain with a common name, very hard to optimize. Try a name which is not common.

While preparing your webpages


Add meta tags—> description, keywords, title. Give the first prefrence to the words related what your site is about like for website designing —–> website design studio – sycamore.in, dont write the name of your site first. Add only relevant words as the search only picks up the first 3-4 words only while searching, rest are picked up they are not found on any other website.

2.Keywords are written as –> website, designing, so on and description–>website design, flash template design,etc.

After launching your site ( adding link )


Try to add your website in all the search engines and open directories. It is very necessary step. Open directories are the best to boost up your ranking.

2.Article writing is the best way. Submit your articles to the popular article submission websites.One is ezinearticles.com.Really good one.


If you are lazy like me add comments to various blogs you find on the net.I use www.globeofblogs.com to find all teh blogs. And do taKe a look where you are adding your link the page should have a page rank where your comment is being added otherwise it will not be of much help.

4.(important) Why adding links is so important? When google’s crawler starts to crawls the websites present on the web, it checks for the links on the pages which are already cached in its database. If your link is not there your site will not be crawled. Its like a chain reaction, one is linked to the other, other is linked to another. But if your site is a new submission it will have to wait to get a tocken. After the token is recieved then only your site will be crawled. But if your link is found on a site which has a good rank in google. Your site will be crawled and pages from your site will be cached. For eg if google crawls a site on 21st of every month and your site is linked to it your site will also be crawled on that day. Before adding the link to a page do check when has google cached that page.

Please do read all the points carefully.These can fetch you a good rank in google.This article is the private property of Bikramjit Singh.You can distribute it further in any way but please make sure that the name of the author remains intact while publishing.

thanks

by bikramjit singh

[Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post 

Tweet This Post links powered by Tweet This v1.4.1, a WordPress plugin for Twitter.