Forum Moderators: open

Message Too Old, No Replies

Page Rank For Sale

         

aek

3:58 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I found out recently that a fairly high profile website (PR9) is selling site wide text links at $2000 per month. All the websites with links are now PR8 or 9 as a result.

It looks as if there are the same 20 paid links on all pages, so I'd estimate they are pulling in about $200000 a month from this.

I'd imagine google knows about this by now and has decided not to penalise for this. Since the Searchking lawsuit perhaps google has decided to back off on link penalties for fear of the legalities of doing so.

Due to it's pagerank income whether rightly or wrongly, this website would certainly have the financial clout to sue them, as penalising this website would have a massive financial effect.

Could this open the door to websites blatantly selling pagerank?

bateman_ap

4:02 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I think it all depends. Selling a ad on a page, whether it is text or a banner is just that. An ad sale. Speak to most of the affliates round here and I think they will tell you that a text link has a higher CTR than a banner so it could be argues that it is a perfectly aceptable form of advertising.

I think the only way Google could penalise is that if they thought that the site was delibaratly making money off selling PR, the fact that the page might be a PR9 doesn't matter if they don't make any reference to any boost in Google.

mfishy

4:08 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Exactly.

Banning sites that sell text ads would be insane. They are the most effective and least annoying ads on the web.

I think a possible penalty might only come into effect if they were actually advertising selling PR. Believe it or not, some people may buy text ads for the actual traffic that they generate.

martinibuster

4:11 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Ok. Wait a minute. Some folks over in another thread were poo-pooing banner sales, but here's someone who's a raging success. Are ad sales dead, or just poorly done?

aek

4:17 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I'm not saying it's right or wrong. But these ads are obviously there for page rank purposes. You'd be pretty stupid to buy any kind of ad on a site completely unrelated to the topic of your website, these ads won't be getting any business because of click thrus from that site.

Whether you advertise it as being page rank for sale or not it's still the same thing.

Do you think google is turning a blind eye as long as it's not advertised as such, even though anyone with half a brain would know this is the case.

pmac

4:21 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



You'd be pretty stupid to buy any kind of ad on a site completely unrelated to the topic of your website

What if the demographic of the visitor to that site is one I am targeting? Does it still make it stupid?

jady

4:23 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Would love to see the URL - can you sticky it?

mfishy

4:24 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Some of the largest and most successful sites on the web advertise their banners all over the place. Unless you research the traffic, it's difficult to say whether it will convert or not.

Anyway, a lot of the highest traffic pages happen to also have a nice PR. It would be nearly impossible for Google to determine whether these sites were selling ads for solely PR or not.

rogerd

4:24 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member



There's not a lot that Google can do about a site selling ads. I can certainly imagine that the algo could be adjusted to more heavily weight the theme of the linking site and the theme of the page on which the link appears. This would still allow PR sale within a topic area, but at least an ad on a popular, relevant site makes sense from a traffic standpoint as well as PR.

egomaniac

5:29 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I am pretty sure I know which site AEK is referring to.

The "ads" are text links. They are displayed in such a way that a visitor "could" see them, but in all probability never will actually read and click through them.

I don't think this has been going on that for long - less than 6 mos. Maybe only a couple of months. I could be wrong though.

I agree that this has been done to sell the links for PR boost purposes. As long as they keep a low-profile about it, Google may leave them alone.

But the fact that we are discussing it here raises the profile a bit doesn't it?

Brad

5:37 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



This sort of thing will only proliferate. The cat is firmly out of the bag.

aek

5:43 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I agree the cat is out of the bag, but what does everyone think Google's going to do about it.

The implications are that as long as a site is reasonably well optimised you'll essentially be able to buy your way to the top of the SERP's.

As has been mentioned in this thread, in a lot of cases it is quite difficult to know for sure whether unrelevant text links have been bought just for pagerank purposes or not, which is why it makes it difficult for google to anything about it.

jeremy goodrich

5:52 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



imho, if you are buying ads for your site - then if there are any side benefits, good for you! You've proven yourself to be a savvy business person.

I don't believe anyone would say, "you bought that banner with the double redirect to improve pagerank!"

And, I doubt that Google would even care. But - if the link happened to pass on pagerank - then hey, you just got an extra bonus.

Bottom line is - does the site offer the visitor what they thought ti might from the title / description?

If so, then user happy - got relevant site - site happy, got happy visitor - Google happy, made surfer's day & sold relevant advertising during the process.

Maybe surfer clicks on adwords too...but finds what they need in the serps, or perhaps finds what they need in adwords. Either way, as long as the punter is happy with what they found, Google is doing a job good enough to keep the user coming back for more.

As for trying to curb the 'advertising' process of buying media -> because people expect to get an ROI for the buying of the links, there isn't anything Google can do.

And, imho, they probably don't care to. As long as the surfer gets what they want - everybody wins. :)

Even if they get what they wanted - from your competitor. lol.

aek

6:01 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Jeremy, I agree it isn't detrimental to the average surfer or to me.

But, google obviously does care about it to some degree or the PR for sale website wouldn't still be PR0.

Zapatista

6:05 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)



Because of things like this, I anticipate Google will be taking a drastic step. There is a similar thread in link development on this problem.

If I were in charge at Google, I would not remove PageRank, but not allow users to see it in the toolbar or Google directory. Not knowing what people have would cripple this pagerank selling. But PageRank would still be a strong factor in the Google algo.

jeremy goodrich

6:13 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



There is a famous dot com that is on the ropes now. What if they decided to stir up advertising revenue, by selling text ads on their home page?

And, what if those had a simple redirect that Google could follow, their site was high pagerank, etc.

Would it be fair to ban them because they are hurting, and started selling ads more & more people wanted to buy?

I hardly think so.

So, if there is no redirect involved, and it's a straight text link but sold on a monthly basis, is that wrong?

Same site, same story - only straight links, instead of redirects? Should Google ban them, because abviously, "they are selling pagerank"?

How does Google know what's going on in their mind? Unless they advertise it, Google has no way of knowing if the link was bought / sold for PageRank purposes, or simply because somebody thought it was a very good media buy.

Now we are getting into mind reading here...and I think it's a bit disturbing. Sure, if somebody is manipulating the cr*p out of Google, the deserve to get their site kicked out & buried.

But - if they are just selling ads why bother penalizing them? And if the side effect is that one of the sites that bought an ad starts to rank higher in Google it is a bit logical that the site is a good choice for whatever they sell.

Why? Because

1) they spent money on marketing, and logically, they can't afford marketing if they ain't makin' money

2) odds are, they have a site that people are interseted in - how many firms are willing to sell ads to lousy sites? it hurts their image to be associated with lower quality, so odds are, they won't.

Google is very focused on doing what they do best. I can't remember (as a surfer) the last time I thougth, "gee, I just can't find what I"m looking for..."

And Google has the answer for anybody that can't figure out how to get enough traffic to sell people: adwords, and sponsorships. If you are in business, and selling something, every sale will cost you soemthing to obtain.

Figure out how much time you invested in 'free traffic' and who knows? It might be more worth your while to buy advertising on other sites, instead of optimizing, or buy adwords. :)

Brad

6:20 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>>but not allow users to see it in the toolbar or Google directory.

In the end they probably will. I don't think they can keep carpet bombing like they have done before. At some point the collateral damage will come back and bite Google if they keep doing it.

But if they get rid of all the PR indicators then they need to also get rid of the penalty for linking to a PR0 site. Because how can anybody tell?

egomaniac

6:28 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Yeah I don't think that Google will do anything about this. If someone is selling "text link ads", there is nothing to be penalized for. How could they defend their own image if the "rule" became: You can sell text ads, unless you are PR8, or unless you are on our approved list of PR8 advertiser sites (e.g. Yahoo, etc.).

SearchKing was different. They made a point of selling the link for PageRank purposes.

Google can't stop every trick out there. They know that. They just need to keep up the impression of integrity. They do that but crushing the visible spammers. The invisibles can stay that way as long as most of the internet public has confidence in the integrity of Google's results.

Besides, the industry's most likely to buy PR links are highly commercial anyway. Finding information is less likely to be what the user is looking for.

ciml

6:37 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



aek:
> The implications are that as long as a site is reasonably well optimised you'll essentially be able to buy your way to the top of the SERP's.

As long as your incoming link text and PageRank are equivalent to your competition then you can claw your way to the top of the SERPs through on page keyword repetition. These factors are each just part of the whole.

Of course buying and selling links can help a site's position in an engine that places some emphasis on link text and PageRank, but that doesn't make it a safe easy way to get #1. Quite the contrary; I remember a chap I helped back in 2001 who suffered terribly until he took my advice and removed the text link adverts.

Neither he nor his customers benefited from the arrangement, which lost him PR across his network for over a year. Caveat emptor...

GoogleGuy

6:39 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



aek, feel free to fill out a spam report. I would mention your nick on the submission..

aek

6:46 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Googleguy, I've got absolutely no problem with what they are doing. I don't think it is spam.

Google created the value of pagerank this website is using your creation for commercial purposes without deterioating the SERP's.

I know if I had a PR9 website, I'd be selling text links at $2000 a month if I could.

zarm777

8:00 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The only reason this is an issue is because the site has a page rank of 9. I buy text links from many sources myself, some have a rank of 6 or even higher but that is just a bonus to the traffic increase. What is google to do, only allow text ads on low ranking sites? If the high ranking sites get banned for this then better ban Yahoo first for selling their paid links because all they are good for is increasing rank in google now that google took over the search results there.

born2drv

8:21 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The high PR sites that obviously look like are selling text ads for PR are easy to spot. (keyword stuffing anchor text, miniture font, buried on the bottom of the page)

All google has to do is drop them by -2PR. (9 to 7, or 8 to 6). It wouldn't make much of a difference at all for them if they don't care about PR. It would not be detremental to their site. PR6 or PR7 is still very respectable. But it would impact their PR for sale business tremendously.

[edited by: NFFC at 8:24 pm (utc) on Feb. 18, 2003]
[edit reason] De-duped [/edit]

rfgdxm1

8:36 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>If the high ranking sites get banned for this then better ban Yahoo first for selling their paid links because all they are good for is increasing rank in google now that google took over the search results there.

This is a fair point. One can make a pretty good argument that the Yahoo! directory today is largely PageRank for sale.

Zapatista

8:39 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)



IF Google wanted to, they could design a new option for the Toolbar and directory that would not display PageRank for sites they select.

It would be pretty hard to sell text links from a PR8 or 7 site if your potential buyers couldn't see what your PR was.

Just an extension of the idea in my previous post. Not even sure I really believe in it. Just an idea. I would hate to see Google take worse drastic steps at curbing this problem so I am looking for a compromise.

1milehgh80210

8:45 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



How is buying a text link much different than...
Buying an adwords link
Buying a spot in directory (yahoo or similar)
Bartering a text link
Buying a banner
Paid submission to s.e.
Does it just depend on who is doing the buying & selling?
This is not new BTW.

rfgdxm1

9:02 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Right 1milehgh80210. Even before the days of the Google toolbar, webmasters were buying/bartering/etc. links and banners on other sites for their own advantage. How can someone looking from the outside know if the link was bought or sold for PageRank or other reasons?

glengara

9:11 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I was never convinced of the benefits of using so much off-page criteria to determine ranking.
IMO, if they don't rethink/revalue the PR/link text thing, their page evaluation methodology will increasingly become a bit of a joke.

jeremy goodrich

9:32 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>I was never convinced of the benefits of using so much off-page criteria to determine ranking.

hmm...I take it Google isn't your favorite search engine then? :)

From where I'm sitting, I love their results. Looking at my logs, apparently, so do lots of other people (else they wouldn't have found my site there...he he)

As far as I know, Google has the largest market share of queries / day...perhaps other people aren't convinced of the benefits of using off page stuff to rank a page, but -> the punters seem to like the results.

How much free press does Altavista or Fast, or WiseNut for that matter, get? Not much, to go by what people post here with respect to citing other shows / stories / magazines / news papers, etc.

Getting back to the topic, sure - Google could try and go through and pick out every site by hand. However, their goal is to provide the best results in the world ( i think ) for the people that use it to find what they're looking for.

I can't remember the last time a friend who doesn't know how search engines work said, "Google sucks. I can't find anything" :)

AmishJohn

9:35 pm on Feb 18, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Rather than sell add words Google should sell PageRank. A monthly auction to buy 1000 PR9s, 10,000 PR8s, 100,000 PR7s would direct advertising money to Google and eliminate the largely useless link exchange effort of countless web sites.
This 69 message thread spans 3 pages: 69