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Seeking PR7

How many inbound links needed?

         

espeed

1:45 am on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Today, one of my home pages has a PR6, and Google shows 294 inbound links. I know that PR is not entirely based on the number of inbound links, but does anyone know what the current number range of inbound links is for sites with a PR7?

Extra info: Site has seven pages listed in dmoz, and several internal pages have a PR6.

Air

1:54 am on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Welcome to WebmasterWorld espeed!

It's not just number of links, it's the PR of the incoming links that is important too, you'll want links from sites with PR7 and higher to boost your PR. Just be careful how you go about it. You may want to use the search link at the top of the page to search for "buying PR", as well as "bad neighborhoods" in the Google forum, there are some caveats you should be aware of if you aren't already.

edit to fix spelling

[edited by: Air at 3:56 am (utc) on Oct. 9, 2002]

Bentler

3:46 am on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



PR 7 is a big box-- I have a pr 7 site that google lists as having 2190 inlinks (this isn't accurate, just a reference) with some from high ranking sites. Google lists my parent site as having 7430 inlinks and also ranks it pr 7.

skibum

4:23 am on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



A PR6 should be bale to jump to a PR7 with a link from one or two PR8 or 9s

Powdork

4:42 am on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I am doing some work for a pair of sites one of which is a strong pr 6. It is the only site linking to the second site and it WAS also a pr 6 until the last update. Now its a pr 5.
Skibum, whats your mountain?

dvduval

4:50 am on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Could a PR 6 site rise to PR 7 with no inbound links higher than 6?

fathom

5:07 am on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Air is quite correct -- the number of links is not important but the PR that is transferred from each.

With 1 site 294 created the jump to PR7, on another 514.

You will increase faster to the next level if the links to you are the only one on the outbound page.

This tends to be one of the major factors (or differences) why some sites need only a few hundred links to get to PR7 and others need a few thousand.

Could a PR 6 site rise to PR 7 with no inbound links higher than 6?

Yes -- the site mentioned above (294 links) is one such site. However, all the links to it were PR4 - PR6 where most pages had no other links sharing the outgoing PR.

wingslevel

2:38 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I am a pr 6 with 630 links (none above pr6) - I am betting that I need over 1,000 unless I can get a pr7 or 2. I have a competitor who has a pr7 with only 300, but he has some pr 7's. In my segment, I might as well forget about getting a link from an 8 - I don't even know of one...

Mohamed_E

2:51 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



espeed,

The good news is that some of your internal pages are PR 6. That seems to me to mean that the index page has a reasonably high 6, so it may not be too difficult to get it to 7.

Of course adding any links will raise your real PR even if it is not reflected in the truncated toolbar PR. A high 6 is better than a low 6 even if they look the same with the toolbar. The ranking of pages in the SERP uses the real value.

mat

2:54 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



In my segment, I might as well forget about getting a link from an 8 - I don't even know of one...

Same here - there are only a couple of 7's in my area, and a few 6's - of which we're one, but that kinda makes moving up a bit tricky. This is a commercial area, so none of the competition is going to be linking to us, for sure.

Ah well, visibility is fine, but <tantrum mode>I want that 7 </tantrum mode>. Mat

TWhalen

5:37 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I maintain at least 7 sites with a PR of 7.
Of those, the one with the least amount of inbound links is 328.

So, if PR is entirely based on inbound links (which I suspect its not...)then you are not far off.

skibum

5:55 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Skibum, whats your mountain?

Well, I wouldn't exactly call it a "mountain" but the most frequented hill:) is at 7Springs.

As far as PR, if you have on strong site say PR5 and up, you can give a new site a PR of one lower just by putting a link from the "strong" site to the new site.

It seems to work at least up to PR6 for the site giving the link, with a 5 becoming the PR of the new site. Don't have any PR7+ sites laying around but presumably it would work in a similar fashion on up the scale.

mack

6:09 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



It realy does depend on the quailty of the inbound links.

I have a PR6 with only 78 inbound links. but they are mostly relevant and of a pretty good PR themselfes.

Another site also has PR6 with 250 back links.

I also figure the first site to be a higher PR6 because most of the first level pages have also got PR6

espeed

6:41 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Well it looks like my site now has eight pages listed in dmoz, I expect 10 by the end of the week. The dmoz and Google category pages have few (if any) inbound link and the Google toolbar does not appear to give them a true PR.

Does anyone know how much extra weight Google gives dmoz listings? How effective are they in increasing a site's PR? Is a category high in the tree more effective than a very specific category? Is an equivalent Yahoo listing better? Thanks.

Sasquatch

6:52 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)



Does anyone know how much extra weight Google gives dmoz listings?

Google employees. Everyone else is just guessing and my bet is that most of them are very wrong.

How effective are they in increasing a site's PR?

At least as effective as any other link from a equivalent page.

Is a category high in the tree more effective than a very specific category

More effective at what? Sending you traffic or improving your PR?

I would worry about being in the appropriate directory more than being in the higher directory.

Is an equivalent Yahoo listing better?

See my first and last answers.

Is this some sort of either/or deal?

[edited by: Sasquatch at 6:54 pm (utc) on Oct. 9, 2002]

crobb305

6:54 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I have a site that is not yet ranked (brand new). I am already in Yahoo. And I just got an inbound link from an on-topic PR6 that only has 5 outbound links. Anyone know if this might get me to PR5?

:)

Sebastian

7:07 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I have a site with a PR7 that has 122 backward links to it. So it's definitely about the quality, not just shear quantity.

Quinn

7:15 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Sebastion - agreed. I have seen PR 7s that show as few as 40 backlinks.

fathom

8:05 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Does anyone know how much extra weight Google gives dmoz listings?

Lots

How effective are they in increasing a site's PR?

Every link (with exception to PR0 pages) transfer PR - the higher the PR and the less other links that share that PR the more you get.

Is a category high in the tree more effective than a very specific category?
No (usually) low level (more specific cats) usually have fewer outbound links. A cat with PR7 and 50 outbound links is worth less than a PR5 cat with 4 outbound links. <Added> It is also far easier to get multiple low level cat listings than to receive 1 high level listing.</added>

Is an equivalent Yahoo listing better?
Yes and No
Yes - usually for traffic when compared to DMOZ/Google directory traffic.

No - because of PR value (once only -- a few if in regionals). With every DMOZ listings you in fact get 10 links from other search engine associated directories and most of which also transfers PR.

In addition, some DMOZ clones are as PR rich (or nearly) as DMOZ is itself.

austtr

11:18 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>Well it looks like my site now has eight pages listed in dmoz, I expect 10 by the end of the week. <

Run that part by me again.... you're saying the same site has 8 pages in ODP with more following?

Can you elaborate on that a bit please. What is the site about?

fathom

11:28 pm on Oct 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



The site in my sticky currently has 30 (3 just recently added and not in the directory search).

Dmoz.org TOS suggests that multiple listings are an exception and not a rule. I prefer being an exception.

espeed

3:38 am on Oct 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



> Run that part by me again.... you're saying the same site has 8
> pages in ODP with more following?
> Can you elaborate on that a bit please. What is the site about?

Yes, it's my personal website, and the different links are to various services or articles I have written. None of my site's pages are listed twice, and most are in different categories.

However, you can have different pages listed multiple times in the same category. Two of my pages are listed in the same category, and Jakob Nielsen's site, useit.com, has 27 listings in dmoz, with 11 listings in Computers: Internet: Web Design and Development: Web Usability and 8 listings in Computers: Internet: Web Design and Development: Web Usability: People.

I am not a dmoz editor, but apparently if you have quality content, they have no problems listing your site more than once.

fathom

4:07 am on Oct 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



WebmasterWorld has 21. SearchEngineWorld has 17.

Some reasons for multiple listings:

Unique and/or original content

Multiple themes/topics

Content supports listing in Kids & Teen topics (copywrite may have a lower level of comprehension).

Content fitting for multiple sub-categories but insufficient coverage to support a listing at a higher topical level.

e.g. flying lessons (services), single engine aircraft sales, remote control aircraft and model airplanes could all be in the same web site but have significantly different content appealing to different audiences.

If a higher level topical category was "aircraft" but many other sub-categories were: commercial, transports, military, flight school, antique, history, etc., it would be next to impossible to justified a single listing under the higher level category "aircraft".

[edited by: fathom at 5:53 am (utc) on Oct. 10, 2002]

steveb

5:46 am on Oct 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



"I am not a dmoz editor, but apparently if you have quality content, they have no problems listing your site more than once."

"WebmasterWorld has 21. SearchEngineWorld has 17."

"You should submit a site to the single most relevant category."

Google's next tweak really has to be to deal with blatant unlevel playing field of dmoz.

fathom

5:58 am on Oct 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Google.com has 92 listings, Dmoz.org has 203 listings

don't figure?

startup

6:04 am on Oct 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Two sites I know of, one has 351 listing and the other has 156.
Google Guy has already stated that ODP listings aren't treated any differently.

mack

6:06 am on Oct 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Dmoz.org has 203 listings

Wonder how many people search for the open directory project on dmoz.org :)

fathom

6:16 am on Oct 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



stevenb although you correctly quoted DMOZ TOS - the second and third statements are as important as the first.

You should submit your site to the single most appropriate category that is directly relevant to your site's content. Please only submit your site one time. The ODP editors reserve the right to use their editorial discretion to determine which category or categories your site will ultimately be placed.

steveb

6:22 am on Oct 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



"Google Guy has already stated that ODP listings aren't treated any differently."

Differently than what? ODP listings are instant pagerank. Some interest areas have the top sites peak out at PR6. Multiple links from dmoz PR7 or PR6 pages can instantly make a site (with good internal linking) #1 in pagerank for that interest area, without doing anything else.

Am I to conclude that it is correct to submit each of my individual webpages to to plausible dmoz directory pages? I've got a few pages on my site off-topic from the rest of it. When dmoz says "site" I apparently dumbly believed that they actually meant "site". If I got dmoz PR7 links to a couple of my inner pages, off-topic pages, that would easily vault me over my competition.

steveb

6:25 am on Oct 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



fathom, you are saying dmoz editors sit around and decide to add a site submitted to one category to twenty more categories because they think it's a good idea... and that anyone who only gets one listing wasn't added to multiple categories by this group? I'm certainly not buying that.
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