How Anyone Can Improve Their Search Engine
Rankings
The goal of the search engines
is to provide the most relevant information to its users. It's
in the best interests of the search engines to be relevant
because if the information returned is not relevant, the web
user will use a different search engine and this will take
money out of their (massive) pockets.
The majority of searches
worldwide are conducted on 3 major search engines (Google,
Yahoo! and MSN).
Are you familiar with algebra?
The search engines use mathematical formulas called
'algorithms' to evaluate your website's relevance in relation
to 'search terms' or 'keywords'. Each search engine uses
different algorithms (which are not disclosed to the public),
which focus on 2 main areas which I call: Content and Link
Popularity.
The term 'link popularity' as
I refer to it, means: "How authoritative your website is in the
eyes of the search engines according to the amount of links you
have and the quality and relevance of those links." (When
compared to the content on your website and your competitors'
websites).
This means any content in your
website including: all text, images, audio and
videos.
PageRank is a series of
algorithms that was invented by Serge Brin and Larry Page, (the
billionaire founders of Google) in 1998 and is constantly
evolving.
Google's description of
Pagerank:
"PageRank relies on the
uniquely democratic nature of the web by using its vast link
structure as an indicator of an individual page's value. Google
interprets a link from page A to page B as a vote, by page A,
for page B. But, Google looks at more than the sheer volume of
votes or links a page receives, it also analyzes the pages that
casts the vote. Votes cast by pages that are themselves
'important' weigh more heavily and help to make other pages
'important'."
PageRank (from here on I will
refer to it as PR) works on a scale from 0 - 10, with 0 being
lowest and 10 being highest. The higher your PR is, the more
authoritative your site is.
Each website that links to you
will give you some of their PR (if they have any) and vice
versa. A great analogy is that PR is like water. The higher the
PR of the website that links to you, the more water that they
will give you. It's important to remember though that if that
webpage is already giving water (linking) to lots of other
sites, they will not give you as much as they would if they
weren't linking to so many sites.
Most websites have the highest
PR on their homepage because that's where the majority of their
incoming links point to. A common theme is that a website will
have a high PR on their homepage, but low or no PR on most of
their internal pages.
It is important to have "deep
links", these are links going to a page in your site other than
your homepage.
FAQs:
Do I need to have a high PR to
get into the top listings of the search engines?
That's a tricky question, my
answer is Yes and No! Each of the search engines has different
criteria when it comes to listing your website on their first
page. It is possible that you could have PR of zero and get the
first listing. However, this would most likely be only on a
keyword with no competition. Example: "vanilla carrot
croisants" Obviously this is not a word that anyone is typing
into the search engines, (as of now lol).
If the keyword you are trying
to get high rankings on is competitive, usually the top spots
go to relevant sites that have the highest PR.
As the PageRank formula is an
algorithm, how many links would it take from a PR 4 site
webpage to equal one link from a PR5 site?
The answer to this is kept top
secret by Google and Yahoo, but some industry experts predict
that you would need between 8-10. So if that is true than it
would take from 60-100 PR3 links to equal just 1 PR5 link based
on PR alone.
Personally I think this is
just a vague guideline that doesn't hold true in many cases. A
PR5 link will be more or less valuable depending on: how many
pages it is already linking to, it's relevance to your website
theme, and other hidden factors.
How do I get onto the first
page of Google?
Getting onto the first page of
Google (and the other search engines) for a particular keyword
or keyword phrase depends on 3 factors:
*Content - what your webpage
contents say that it is about in relation to a particular
keyword.
*Link Reputation - what other
web-pages say your webpage is about (based on the words in and
around the links that point to your website) and the determined
quality and authority of those web-pages.
*Authority - how important
your website is in the "eyes" of the search engines based on
the amount of links and quality of links pointing to your site
(PageRank)
The position that your site
will get depends on the 'score' that it receives based on these
factors. Remember that this 'score' is always in relation to a
particular keyword.
If your website is about
"chocolate cake recipes" (are you getting hungry yet?), your
website can achieve rankings related to this keyword. You won't
be able to rank for "banana pudding" or "creme brule" unless
you have that content in your website.
If you would like to get
higher search engine rankings I suggest you start to learn
about how to optimize your content and how to get quality links
to your site. Happy Optimizing!
For more information about
Killer Search Engine Tips & Techniques, pick up your copy
of the Home Business Success Kit at www.HomeBusinessSuccessKit.com
To Your
Success, Mick
Moore – The Internet
Entrepreneur
www.QuickStartExpert.com
1.619.226.2877
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