- PageRank is only one of numerous methods Google uses to determine a page’s relevance or importance.
- Google interprets a link from page A to page B as a vote, by page A, for page B. Google looks not only at the sheer volume of votes; among 100 other aspects it also analyzes the page that casts the vote.
- PageRank is based on incoming links, but not just on the number of them - relevance and quality are important.
- PR(A) = (1-d) + d(PR(t1)/C(t1) + … + PR(tn)/C(tn)). That’s the equation that calculates a page’s PageRank.
- Not all links weight the same when it comes to PR.
- If you had a web page with a PR8 and had 1 link on it, the site linked to would get a fair amount of PR value. But, if you had 100 links on that page, each individual link would only get a fraction of the value.
- Bad incoming links don’t have impact on Page Rank.
- Page Rank considers site age, backlink relevancy and backlink duration.
- Content is not taken into account when PageRank is calculated.
- PageRank does not rank web sites as a whole, but is determined for each page individually.
- Each inbound link is important to the overall total. Except banned sites, which don’t count.
- PageRank values don’t range from 0 to 10. PageRank is a floating-point number.
- Each Page Rank level is progressively harder to reach. PageRank is believed to be calculated on a logarithmic scale.
- Google calculates pages PRs once every few months.
- Google tries to find pages that are both reputable and relevant.
Thursday, June 7, 2007
How Does PageRank Work?
Posted by SEO Service at 12:21:00 PM
Labels: Page Rank
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