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Power of an optimized page vs PR

         

hightraffic10

5:11 pm on Nov 22, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Heres a question, say you have just optimized a page for a particular keyword but your pr is like a 4 and you have barely any links. Will this optimized page knock out the competititors (who have higher pr and links) that only mention the keyword once or twice almost like the got there on accident.

Brett_Tabke

5:21 pm on Nov 22, 2002 (gmt 0)

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No - rarely if ever. PR will trump all if it is relevant to the search.

crash

5:23 pm on Nov 22, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I disagree... if the site with lower PR and less links is more relevant than chances are that they will outrank the site with less relevance, higher PR and more links.

heini

5:24 pm on Nov 22, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



In my experience pages with low PR, like 2 or 3, can outperform PR4 pages easily for phrases, if they low PR page is totally focused on that phrase.

hightraffic10

5:29 pm on Nov 22, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I agree with all of you, it seems that this will be a never ending debate, I look at PR being king but while I am working on PR I try to optimize as well as I can. PR seems like everything right now but this could lead to trouble if there are all of these sites with great content but low PR rankings suck and sites with the word mentioned once or twice rank high.

Brett_Tabke

5:37 am on Nov 23, 2002 (gmt 0)

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Context is the big change this year. It's why a lower pr site can outperform a higher one. That's off the page stuff and not optimizable as ht10 was asking about.

irock

5:56 am on Nov 23, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



In my experience, the number of keywords being searched plays an important part of this ranking game. If you are searching with one keyword, then PR and inbound links will outweight anything. If you are searching with multiple keywords (3 or more), then your context-optimized page will outrank others. That's from my experience after running 2 years of a PC hardware site.

Beachboy

6:32 am on Nov 23, 2002 (gmt 0)

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So, in order to assure a first-place finish, pursue top-notch optimization, get a lot of PR, and every inbound link has the keyword or keyword phrase in it, without dilution (extraneous words in the anchor text). :) Works.

doc

9:00 am on Nov 23, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I think optimization can benefit more than appreciated. Most of my pages are ranking ahead of better PR pages. One of my pages ranks better than Google's regional directory page and another page with a pr4 outranks a pr8.

bull

9:08 am on Nov 23, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



my experience: if the search terms or search phrase is in the title of a page, it can outperform other pages with higher pr and something totally different in the title.

Liane

12:57 pm on Nov 23, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



In the last update, my index page was bumped down from PR5 to PR3. Everyone except two sites in my category got the same treatment.

It has not affected the results for that page in the SERPS and in fact, it is now beating a PR5 index page (for a competitive phrase) where I used to be number 4 and am now #3. The PR5 page used to be number #3 and is now #4. They have more links than I do and neither of us has changed a thing on our index pages.

Go figure!

ciml

2:29 pm on Nov 23, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Beachboy:
> So, in order to assure a first-place finish, pursue top-notch optimization, get a lot of PR, and every inbound link has the keyword or keyword phrase in it, without dilution (extraneous words in the anchor text).

Beachboy, you just summed up about half of the last 7,000 threads:).

I've been contemplating heini's point for a while ("low PR, like 2 or 3, can outperform PR4 pages easily for phrases"). My feeling (purely qualitative) is that it's much harder for a PR5 to outperform a PR7 than it is for a PR2 to outperform a PR4.

Could it be that the curve for the PR weighting is different from the curve for the Toolbar scale?

fathom

3:00 pm on Nov 23, 2002 (gmt 0)

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



I've been contemplating heini's point for a while ("low PR, like 2 or 3, can outperform PR4 pages easily for phrases"). My feeling (purely qualitative) is that it's much harder for a PR5 to outperform a PR7 than it is for a PR2 to outperform a PR4.

Could it be that the curve for the PR weighting is different from the curve for the Toolbar scale?

As I have observed PR5 do beat out PR7's often (just maybe not as often as lower scaled pages)

I would tend to believe that the sheer number of unique "votes" would play a part in this as well.

1000 links from lower PR pages creating a PR5 would be a far more difficult to manipulate than a page at PR7 received from 20 links, thus more valuable to google users.

ciml

6:03 pm on Nov 23, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The number of unique "votes" is very plausible. I also wonder whether it's partly that the way that "link text" votes work with on-page optimisation.

Maybe if you have the right anchortext in plenty of reasonable PageRank incoming links then the 'relevance' weight doesn't need on-page factors so much.

Robert Charlton

5:26 am on Nov 24, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



>>page with a pr4 outranks a pr8<<

Taken to a logical extreme, a relevant PR2 page will outrank an irrelevant PR10 page. If the search is about red widgets and your page is about green gizmos, in a competitive environment, PageRank isn't going to get it up there.

I think there's plenty of room for on-site optimization. Simply tuning the proximity of words (that make up a phrase) in your title or on a page can have a huge effect in competitive rankings. All other things being equal, though, high PR and relevant incoming links (coming from high PR sites) make your job a lot easier.

doc

7:22 am on Nov 24, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Robert: Re: "red widgets and green gizmos"

I agree with high pr and incoming links are important however I will sticky mail you with my pr4 page and the pr8 page. I am pretty amazed that my page is higher ranked. Interested in your comments.

Robert Charlton

9:03 am on Nov 24, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



>>I am pretty amazed that my page is higher ranked.<<

doc - It really is a case of red widgets and green gizmos here.

You have a title, some headings with good page position, and global text nav links pointing to your page, and they all contain the target phrase in exact or close to exact matches. The competing page doesn't. To the human mind, the competing page is associated with the same subject, but it doesn't really feature the target phrase.

Search engines are very literal. They look only at specific text content... Google doesn't support "stemming" (adjusting for singular and plurals and other variants of the same word)... and no engine can yet translate "foreign gizmo manufacturers" into "international widgets."

The competing page does have each of the words in the phrase somewhere on the page, and I wouldn't be surprised (but I didn't check) if it had some incoming links that contained one of the words... but it's really only because of its high PageRank that it ranks for the phrase at all. That is the advantage that high PageRank gives. If that were a PageRank 4 or 5 page, maybe even a 6, I doubt you'd find it in the top 50.

NFFC

2:56 pm on Nov 24, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



If you view rank as being ordered by score and the score being made up of different factors it may become clearer.

Very, very simplified. Imagine that your position at Goggle is made up of two factors, on page stuff [titles, text etc] and off page factors, lets just imagine the only off page factor is PageRank itself. Lets spilt the two factors in half, 100 points each, the aim is to score 200.

Lets say that a PR1 is worth 10 points and PR10 100 points.

Your site which targets the phrase "blue widgets" is a masterpiece of on page optimisation, you score the maximum 100 points for that. Your PR is 5, hence 50 points. Total score 150pts.

Your competitor is not quite as good as you at on page optimisation, he only scores 70 points for on page stuff. He is a PR9 and hence scores 160pts, you lose.

Taken to extremes, if you have a PR0 the most you can ever score is 100. It doesn't matter how good your traditional/on page optimisation is, you will probably be buried even for your unique company name.

Don't take a knife to a gun fight.

Macguru

3:18 pm on Nov 24, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Here is an old tip to verify on your real 'on page' competitors. Searching for the exact string gives some clues about many things.

blue widget [google.com] : 36 200 results
"blue widget" [google.com] : 748 results

This way, you get all the funnies out of the way and can compare oranges with... tangerines.

NFFC

3:26 pm on Nov 24, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



And don't forget

allintitle: "blue widget" [google.com]

Robert Charlton

5:10 pm on Nov 24, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



>>allintitle: "blue widget"<<

Yes... and in fact all of the Google Advanced Search options provide clues and should be studied, both with the default all-the-words search and with the exact phrase, when evaluating why pages rank.

If doc does a search for allinanchor: "international widgets," he'll see that the competing PR8 page still ranks behind him, and that it also has the exact phrase pointing to the page. This (in conjunction with Page Rank) is probably the main reason the PR8 page is ranking for the phrase.

The cache can also be a useful tool for seeing terms pointing to a page, but it works only when the terms don't appear on the page.

On most comparisons, doc is several places ahead of his PR8 competitor (who has a much less focussed page than he does). With allintitle, though, his competitor doesn't rank at all.