By Wayne Hurlbert

As people become more familiar with the process of optimizing their web sites
for rankings in Google, the term PageRank appears in many of their discussions.
In fact, lately, we’re reading and hearing a lot about Google PageRank. The
purpose of this article is not to be a definitive answer on the topic of Google
PageRank (or PR). Instead, it provides some basic answers, to some frequently
asked questions regarding PR.
What Exactly is PageRank Anyway?
PageRank (spelled as one word) is a trademarked technology, belonging to the
search engine Google. It was designed as a numerical system of ranking the
relative importance of web pages, created at Stanford University in California,
by Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin. The concept they used was, in
Google’s own words, to calculate the "uniquely democratic nature of the
web by using its vast link structure as an indicator of an individual page's
value."
If Google’s definition is taken literally, the entire system rests on the
incoming and outgoing links, from the billions of web pages that form the
internet. On the surface, the system seems simple enough. If web page A links to
web page B, Google considers web page A as actually voting for the importance of
web page B.
Of course, like anything else in life, the reality is far more complicated
than what it first seems.
Be sure to always keep in mind that PageRank is not the same thing as your
site’s ranking on the search engine results pages (SERPs). They are entirely
separate items. PR is the relative importance of a page on the web, expressed as
a number. The SERPs are where your site appears on a search for your keywords
PageRank Numbers
Note carefully that PageRank is for each individual web page, not the entire
web site as a whole. Every page in the Google data base has its own PageRank. In
other words, sites don’t have "rank." Rather, every separate page on
your web site has its own PageRank.
Incoming links for web pages are, in the opinion of Google, votes in favor of
that page. On the other hand, Google considers some votes to be more important
than others. The simple number of incoming links to a page is calculated by
Google, but the relative importance of the "voting page" is given even
more weight in the mathematical formula.
The pages that are considered to be more important votes, in turn increase
the importance of the page they link. More important pages pass along more
voting power. This is measured numerically as PageRank.
The PageRank numbers range from 0 to 10. These numbers are usually expressed
as PR0 (for PageRank 0) to PR10 (for PageRank 10).
What do these numbers mean?
First of all, you need to find out what your PageRank is, for every page on
your web site. To do that, you can download the Google Toolbar. It can be found
at http://toolbar.google.com/ and can
be downloaded and installed in your browser in just a few minutes.
Note: Unfortunately, the Google Toolbar is not available from Google for
Mac users.
When the Google Toolbar is loaded, you will see a green line shaded from left
to right, located under the word PageRank. Wave your mouse over the gauge, and
words will appear stating the Google PageRank "importance" of the page
being examined. The Toolbar will give you the PageRank for every web page you
visit.
A PR0 page will show a blank white gauge, while a PR10 page will have the
entire PageRank indicator filled in, with green from side to side.
When a page has a PR0, it is either below the threshold for a PR1 in Pagerank,
is a brand new page, or is under a penalty from Google. Pages that show a gray
colored bar, in place of green or white, are either not included in the Google
index, or are under a substantial penalty for violations of Google’s rules.
The PageRank number shown on the Google Toolbar, is thought by many people,
to be merely an estimate of a page’s true PageRank. While there is no real
proof, one way or the other about the accuracy of the PageRank as presented, we
can only assume is a good estimate. Only Google knows the actual PageRank, and
they aren’t talking.
PageRank is not a series of equal steps; it is logarithmic in its
calculation. In the same way that the earthquake Richter scale is exponential in
calculation, so too is the mathematics behind Google PageRank. It takes one step
to from a PR0 to a PR1. It takes a few more steps to PR2 and PR3. Now, it takes
even more steps to PR4, many more steps again to PR5, and so on. Each level is
progressively harder to reach.
Let’s consider an example.
For illustration purposes, think of a PR5 page. It is indicated by the
PageRank meter being half green and half white. What does that mean?
Google PageRank is not a series of stepped numbers, as presented on the
Toolbar. It is more of a continuum where our PR5 example may be barely over the
boundary from being a PR4, or almost but not quite, a PR6 page. There is a lot
of territory in between.
For our example page to reach a PR6, it will take many more incoming links,
and perhaps higher PR pages as well, to reach that new higher level. It will be
much more difficult to increase from a PR5 to a PR6, than the move was from PR4
to PR5.
PageRank is a form of a voting system. A link to a page is a vote for that
page. Higher PageRank pages are viewed by Google as more important. Their votes
are given more value by Google. In some cases, much more value.
Adding incoming links to your web pages will add PageRank. Every inbound link
adds some PageRank, regardless of its own level. PageRank flows from one page to
another, adding to its store of importance.
Not all incoming links provide the same inflow of value. It may take many PR2
incoming links to increase your targeted page to PR5. On the other hand, it
might only take one PR6 page to give you the same result.
Google has published their original PR calculation formula:
PR(A) = (1-d) + d(PR(t1)/C(t1) + ... + PR(tn)/C(tn))
While we are not certain if this formula is still the one used by Google, it
is probably at least very similar.
In the formula, PR(A) is the PageRank of the page = (1- d) where d is a
"damping factor considered to be about 0.85 + d(PR(t1) where t1 is the PR
of the incoming link page + ...+ PR (tn) is the Page Rank of all of the linking
pages. Each page is divided by C which is the number of outgoing links from each
page.
Note that the PR flow from a page is divided equally between all of the links
on the page. If a page has one outgoing link, that receiving page gets the
entire flow. If there are ten links on the page, the PR flow is divided ten
ways, lessened by the 0.85 damping factor.
Simply put the formula is this:
PR(A) = .15 + .85 * the PR share of every incoming link page.
Based on the formula, the more incoming links from higher PR pages the
better. On the other hand, fewer outgoing links from the sending page, the
better too. You get less PR if it’s divided among more outgoing links.
Everyone gets their share of the PR pie. Your piece simply becomes smaller if
there are more mouths to feed!
You can theoretically gain more total PR from a PR4 page, where you are the
only recipient, than from a PR8 page divided 100 ways.
The bottom line is to add, within the context of an overall linking program, as
many incoming links as you can. They all add PR to varying degrees.
Google only lists your incoming links that have a PR4 or higher. Because of
that display restriction, many people believe Google doesn’t count all of your
links in your PageRank calculation. While they are not shown, Google counts them
all. The lower PR pages may not bring a lot of incoming PR with them, but they
all add up, although in much smaller increments. Don’t ignore lower PR pages
for link exchanges, as today’s PR2 may be a PR7 in the very near future.
You need to keep adding more incoming links to maintain your site’s PR. As
you link out from your site, it’s thought that PR "leaks" to other
sites. While not everyone agrees on whether PR leakage actually occurs, it’s a
good idea to keep your PR increasing. Keep in mind that Google considers
internal links, within your site, as backlinks. They add to your overall
PageRank. They can’t, however, do the job by themselves. Outside sources of PR
are still required to fuel their PR.
While Google isn’t saying, it’s doubtful that you can double or triple PR
flow from one page to another, by adding more than one link to a page. It seems
as if Google only counts a link to a page once.
In much the same way, and again Google is tight lipped on the matter, a page
probably won’t have a link counted by linking to itself. That is not the same
as other pages within the same site linking to the page. They count. Remember,
its page PR, not site PR.
Some Tips on Link Exchanges
When requesting exchanges, always request the page upon which your link will
appear. Don’t let your link trading partner place you on a PR0 "links
page" with hundreds of other outgoing links. Make certain they don’t use
a java link that prevents the passing along of PR. Another thing to avoid is the
discovery that your links have been hidden or cloaked. Make certain all link
exchanges are fair and equitable ones, that pass along the appropriate Pagerank.
Don’t fall into the habit of only considering link exchanges, or soliciting
incoming links from high PR sites, just for the sake of PR. While they are good
to have, be sure to consider the value of your linking program from your
visitor’s point of view. It’s more important for links to be helpful to your
visitor traffic. Your goal is sales. The PageRank is only part of the means of
getting there.
As your PageRank rises, it can help you move higher in the search results,
for your targeted keywords. While PR is only one of about 100 or so factors
considered, in the Google algorithm (the mathematical formula used to determine
your site’s location in the search results), it is still an important
consideration.
As you add more and more incoming links to your many web pages, you should
see a rise in your PageRank.
After all, it’s simply a mathematical formula at work.
Wayne Hurlbert provides information about marketing, promotions, and public
relations for websites and business blogs on Blog
Business World. Wayne also writes daily roller derby commentary, from a
business perspective, on Wayne's
Derby World.
He can be contacted at blogbusinessworld@yahoo.com.
Copyright © by Dedicated Servers, Reseller Web Hosting News All Right Reserved.