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Suppose I am selling Widgets and I enter Widgets in Google. The no.1 on the list is not suprisingly widgets.com. This has a PR6.
But 50% of the sites in the top 10 did not even have a PR. So my question is, how do they get top spots?
Tim
P.S. I'm not selling widgets.
[edited by: WebGuerrilla at 7:04 pm (utc) on Oct. 10, 2003]
2. In order to enable users to see the fresh content that they are adding to the database on a daily basis, you have to give that content a pass when it comes to PR. It's brand new content and it won't have any real PR until the numbers are crunched on the entire database. That doesn't happen on a daily basis.
But 50% of the sites in the top 10 did not even have a PR. So my question is, how do they get top spots?
I never cease to be stunned at the number of people who still believe that pagerank is the sole source of high ranking. Pagerank is only one of 100 factors that determine search results position. Google has several advanced operators that will help you understand their ranking algorithm:
allintext:search term - shows pages with the search term in the text ranked in order.
intext:search term - shows pages with the first word of the search term in the text and the second word anywhere in the document.
allintitle:search term - shows pages with the search term in the title in ranked order.
intitle:search term - shows pages with the first word of the search term in the title and the second word anywhere in the document.
allinanchor:search term - shows pages with the search term in the anchor text of links in ranked order.
inanchor:search term - shows pages with the first word of the search term in the anchor text of links and the second word anywhere in the document.
allinurl:search term - shows pages with the search term in the url in ranked order.
inurl:search term - shows pages with the first word of the search term in the url and the second word anywhere in the document.
Top ranked sites generally rank highly in more than one of these searches. Depending on the weight that Google is assigning to title,text,anchor text or url at any given time the ranking in the search results can change. I try to rank highly for allintext,allinanchor,allintitle and allinurl. That way if Google changes the weight of any of those factors in the algorithm my page should still be in good shape. Paying attention to the anchor text takes care of the PR factor.
Thanks for that list Arnett! Very useful.
You're very welcome.
Until very recently the approach that I was taking when desinging sites and pages was
AllinTitle
AllinText
AllinAnchor
AllinUrl
After reading some of the posts this weekend I'm thinking more:
AllinAnchor
AllinText
AllinTitle
AllinUrl
Google seems to have demoted the weight of AllinTitle and increased the weight of AllinAnchor in their ranking alogrithm. It makes SEO more difficult unless you have control over the anchor text in all of your links. It may be an attempt on their part to "democratize" the results since they count inbound links as "votes" for a site.
Plus plus "G" understands the content value of an "island site" (one with no inbound links) may be far greater than one with hundreds or thousands of links.
Also, sites that traditionally have the most links (affiliate sites) are the ones least linked by "G".
Hmmmmmmmmm... could PR be smoke and mirrors?
-s-
allinurl:search term - shows pages with the search term in the url in ranked order.
Here's something flaky I discovered recently. If you have a page with the following
<SCRIPT SRC=MySuperCounter.pl></SCRIPT>
a search for allinurl:MySuperCounter will yield pages that use the script.
Well, this seems odd to me.
Getting back on topic, you can check PR more reliably using the Google directory (check the green bar on the left). Of course, this only works if the site is in the directory.
Kaled.