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For every post like yours claiming that PR is the be all and end all of Google there are two posts of the "Why does this PR 4 site beat my PR 6 site?".
The reality is simply as Brin and Page wrote in [www7.scu.edu.au...]
Combining all of this information into a rank is difficult. We designed our ranking function so that no particular factor can have too much influence.
It will never be "one factor" that is everything.. those were the olden days.
For my most important two-word keyphrase:
Site A - PR6 - #1
Site B - PR7 - #6
Site C - PR7 - #13
Site D - PR7 - #25
When the two words in the keyphrase are reversed:
Site A - PR6 - #3
Site B - PR7 - #4
Site C - PR7 - #7
Site D - PR7 - #1
In the first case, the PR6 site is the clear winner over all three PR7 sites; in the second, the PR6 site is #2 out of four. Clearly, "on-page factors" trump PageRank at least some of the time.
Clearly, "on-page factors" trump PageRank at least some of the time.
Or maybe that also important link text or other off-page factors that we aren't aware of (are there others?).
It will never be "one factor" that is everything.
And trying to separate them out as BGumble and europe forvisitors show is next to impossible. There are always the anomalies (Nothing on the page and it ranks number 1) that usually show the importance of PR and link text, but also show the not quite up to snuff pages below them in the rankings (or the non-competitiveness of the keywords).
There are a couple of non-anomalous situations where I can't figure out why a page is so high ranked for competitive keywords in my field. Some PR, some backlinks (some with keywords in the link text), a couple of keywords here or there on the page -- and right up there with the big boys with no cloaking that I can see. That's the code I want to break!
If you run a test on URLs with a variety of different on page factors and fixed PageRank, then you'll see that on page factors are crucial.
For highly competitive, short phrases (like "download", "http" or "com"), you'll generally find that PageRank is very important.
For more specific, longer phrases (like "fuzzy blue widget in MyTown"), you'll generally find that on page factors are more important.
<added>
and as jimbeetle points out, link text is very important too
[edited by: ciml at 6:57 pm (utc) on April 16, 2003]
I'm familiar with BGumble's site. A classic example of a site in the form of brand.com doing poorly, because this results in people linking to the site with with "brand" rather than the desirable "keyword". If PR was that much of a factor in the SERPs, BGumble's site with an impressive PR7 should be at least at the bottom of the top 10. Because he has the wrong incoming link text, he is buried so far down the SERPs nobody will find it on that search.