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Tips on Google's
Page Rank Formula
There are many low cost ways to market your service or product
both on the Web. All require tiresome manual research and constant
attention. However, as a fellow entrepreneur, I can assure you that
they will eventually pay off if you do it right. The search engines
are a wonderful resource. One of the newer, more advanced, very
accurate and rapidly growing is Google. Google's proprietary PageRank©
system is used to determine how relevant your site is. We have uncovered
some of what makes Google tick.
First, to view your site's PageRank©, simply download the
Google Toolbar for Internet Explorer, and visit your sites home
page. Ironically, while we researched Google we stumbled upon the
formula by conducting a search in Google.
The original* PageRank formula: PR(A) = (1-d) + d (PR(T1)/C(T1)
+ ... + R(Tn)/C(Tn))
For math wizards:
PR(x) is the PageRank of x, C(x) is the number of outbound links
on a page x, d is a damping factor set between 0 and 1 and is controlled
by Google.
For the rest of us:
Your site's PageRank is almost completely dependent upon links to
your site, backward or reverse links, reduced, to some degree, by
the total number of links to other sites on that page. A link to
your site will have the highest amount of impact on your PageRank
if:
1) The page linking to yours has a high PageRank.
2) The total number of links on that page is low, ideally, just
the one link to your site. A site with a high PageRank and a large
number of outbound links can nullify the impact on your PageRank.
To increase your PageRank, simply get as many links to your site
from pages with a high PageRank and a low number of total links.
Theoretically you can obtain a PageRank of 100% . You can also increase
your PageRank by attaining many links to your site, no matter what
their PageRank, as long as they are ranked. This is a good overall
strategy since it will help you across the board.
Another contributing factor to your site's Google ranking is the
IR score. This score relates the relevance of the search query to
the actual text in the linking page and your site. One of IR factors
is the anchor text, or the text in the link to your page. According
to a Google's creator, "Anchors often provide more accurate
descriptions of web pages." Thus, for sites that allow you
to add URLs be sure to put a link title with descriptive keywords.
Google also uses your page title, font sizes, formatting, keyword
positions, and proximity. Remember this though: Computers determine
the search results, but it's humans that will, or won't, click on
the links, so be sure titles with keywords make sense.
Whether it is Google, other search engines or pay-per-clicks, the
meticulous selection of key-phrases, and descriptions utilizing
these key-phrases, are crucial to successful Web marketing campaigns.
The final piece, probably the most important to determine ROI, is
a tracking system to inform marketing personnel if the clicks being
generated with any campaign result in sales. There are many campaign
variables that even though you produced a 5% click-through rate,
might still not result in sales.
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@ Dream City Design
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