If you’re a website owner and you’re trying to get organic search
engine traffic then you’ve probably heard the term “Google Pagerank”.
But what is Pagerank and how does a websites pagerank effect search
engine rankings? In this article I’ll address those questions and try
to give you some insight into this often confusing topic.
What is
Google pagerank? Google developed the “pagerank” system several years
ago for the purpose of gauging how “important” a web page is. The
higher the pagerank, the more “important” Google thinks the webpage is.
Google uses this gauge as a part of its ranking algorithm.
Where
does pagerank come from? Pagerank is all about webpages linking to
other webpages. You see, every page that Google indexes has a pagerank
value associated with it. Every time one page links to another page, a
portion of that pagerank value “passes” to the page it links to. Higher
ranking pages, pass more pagerank to the pages they link to.
What
happens is, when one page links to another page, it’s kind of like the
page that does the linking is voting for the other page. So to get
pagerank to your webpage, all you have to do is get other pages to link
to it.
Pagerank is really just a mathematical calculation that
determines how “important” a webpage is based on how “important” the
pages that link to it are.
A crucial point here that is often
misunderstood is that pagerank is passed on a page by page basis. Many
webmasters assume that a sites pagerank is determined by its home page.
While it’s true that the homepage is often the highest ranking page
within a website, it doesn’t have to be. Any page on a given website
could rank higher then the homepage.
The myth that the homepage
will have the highest pagerank comes from the fact that many webmasters
(especially old school webmasters) participated in reciprocal linking
programs where they would exchange links to each others homepages. So,
by default, the homepage wound up with the highest pagerank simply
because it had the most links pointing to it.
So how will my pagerank affect my search engine rankings?
Pagerank is simply not as powerful as it once was. There was a time
when all you had to do to rank well was to get enough websites to link
to you and you could dominate virtually any listing you wanted. Today,
the ranking algorithm is much more complex. Many other factors are
taken into account. However, pagerank does still play a reasonably
important roll so getting backlinks is still a major task in the search
engine optimization world. It’s just that the way we go about getting
those links has changed.
How do I check a sites pagerank?
Google offers a free toolbar
that you can download and install on your machine. One of the things
this toolbar does is to display the Pagerank of whatever webpage you’re
looking at.
One final note, my recommendation is to never worry
too much about Pagerank. Build your website to the best of your
ability; create well written, compelling web pages and you’ll get
backlinks naturally. Further, take some of your better articles and
submit them to a few article directories – include a resource box which
links back to your site and you’ll get some excellent backlinks pretty
quickly. Just stay away from reciprocal linking campaigns, whatever
benefit they once had is long gone.
David
Olsen has been an Internet Marketer since 1999. In his career he has
developed well over one hundred affiliate websites and promoted dozens
of products. He is an expert in SEO and writes extensively about it at
his flagship website, Affiliate Profit Center.
Visit his site today and sign up for his free SEO Success Guide!