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[edited by: crobb305 at 5:15 pm (utc) on May 6, 2003]
Site A does have the advantage of most likely having more inbound links if they are a quality site. But an agressive team at site B could overtake them if A isn't on the ball.
[edited by: deft_spyder at 5:17 pm (utc) on May 6, 2003]
Don't underestimate the **quality** of incoming links. The REALLY good links (for an info site) come in over many months from people you dont even ask. They are just not available by "chasing links", though if you pay it is easier.
Different for a commercial "product" or "service" site though.
The other site my well optimize in response as well!
In commercial sites, there are usually none of these unsolicited links anyway. And if you want Pr for a commercial site, increasinlt you need topay get the best PR links, eitehr through directorit listings or those courageous pay for Pr text link guys!
Hope that is clearer.
Also to add, if the two sites are basically offering the same thing as you suggest, they should both be near each other on the SERPS for the keywords both are targeting. Browsers will many times check out both sites, and chosse the best one for them. So i think just small changes in ranking wont make much difference.
Watch out for the ransom note too! (The description google provides for your site - this can be more valuable than a few ranks)
On the other hand, I have a site that competes on some of the same keywords and have been utilizing every SEO technique known to man… I have worked on getting over 50 one-way links to my site with perfect anchor text, optimized the text, built content, and created clean HTML code for Google to easily read. However, no matter what I do, I can not get closer than within 10 spots of his placement.
This leads me to believe that Google heavily weights the time a domain has been listed in their directory and gives it a boost.