A way of thinking: PageRank is an SEO bi-product
Posted by Andrew Faulkner on October 3rd, 2007.
PageRank (PR) is a word which will never disappear from the SEO/SEM arena. For some, it’s an obsession. For me, it’s one of the most pointless factors when considering an internet marketing campaign, mainly due to the following factors:
- You can only see a change in PageRank on a site every few months. Why focus all of your marketing around something which you can only measure three or four times a year?
- It’s a number (one to ten.) It seems ridiculous to put a lot of time and effort with the main aim of changing this number.
- A higher PageRank does not equal a better site. Nor does it mean a higher ranking site. (This example shows how sporadic the PageRank is for each search result.)
I don’t like being negative and I’m not one to rant. Besides, the “PageRank is bad” argument has been done to death. It’s not bad, it’s simply not worth bothering about. This post has the aim of: (a) convincing the PR obsessed marketers to change their outlook and (b) helping fellow designers/developers/internet marketers to explain to clients that what they heard from their friend simply isn’t true. Take the advice or leave it.
For those obsessed…
Checking the PageRank of your sites each week? Wondering when the next PR update will roll around? Why not take a look from a fresh perspective? After all, you can’t do anything about the PR of your site so why not concentrate elsewhere. And that very fact is is surely enough to convince you to think about PR differently. Instead of building incoming links from sites specifically selected for their high ranking PR (in order to boost your PR), try some of the following (and yes, they’ll also indirectly boost your PR):
- Not straying too far from your comfort zone, why not concentrate on encouraging inbound links from some sites that share a similar theme? This will give your site’s ranking in the search engines a boost, especially if the inbound links contain keyphrases related to your site.
But will it still increase my PageRank? Yes. The act of creating relevant inbound links will still up your PR. - Sit and chat. By that I mean hang around communities that relate to your site and offer advice, opinion and intelligent debate to that community. Don’t spam and push your site but make sure people are aware of your site, perhaps using a subtle signature. Become an authoritative figure in that community and gain respect.
But will it still increase my PageRank? Indirectly, yes. By becoming an authority on a given subject, those interested in that subject will link to you as a ‘guru’ or ‘expert.’ And up goes the PR. People are upping your PR for you now. Hurrah. - Focus on content and readership. Start writing more quality content for your visitors. Again, become an authority figure within your niche. This will naturally lead to an increase in readership. Whilst improving your content, also think of ways to reach out to new readers. Offer something useful for free, perhaps, or possibly consider using newer technologies (like RSS) to let people know you exist.
But will it still increase my PageRank? Again, it will in turn. Better content is more likely to get linked to. And more readers means that there is a higher chance of getting linked to. Which means more PR.
Just aiming for an increase in PR will give you just that, a higher PR. Mission complete. But why not do all of the above and boost your site’s traffic, respect and reach whilst also increasing your PR? PageRank has become a bi-product of your marketing. Why would you only want to focus on PR now? Let me know your thoughts on this by commenting below.
And if your client has a PageRank obsession…
I tend to tell them the very same thing that I’ve told you above. I am not ignoring PR, simply using my time (that they’ve paid for) to do better things marketing-wise. And that because of my actions, PR will increase anyway. If you’ve got any advice on this, I’d love to hear it.
Caveats
Despite what I’ve mentioned above, there are always a few situations where PageRank comes into play. It is worth noting your PageRank down and checking it every couple of months in case you need it in the following situations:
Ads: If you are selling adverts on your site via a third-party, that third-party may calculate the ad rate based on your PR. Therefore, yes, a higher PR does help. You could always manage your own adverts though.
Banned: If you have a site with PageRank (PR1+) and it suddenly disappears, it may be an indication that Google isn’t happy with you. A quick check to see if you’re banned would be recommended if this happens.
(A Simple) Conclusion
Think less about PageRank, and care more about your visitors and how to attract new ones.
Make A Comment
( 7 so far )
7 Responses to A way of thinking: PageRank is an SEO bi-product
You have listed some very good pieces of advice here. There are so many factors, but having good content, being involved in the community, and focusing on doing (not just watching your PR) - will ultimately help you in the end, and then SEO won’t be as big of a task, it comes naturally with those things.
Spot on Andy! Page Rank is important but not the be-all-and-end-all of SEO. Get those links in, get some quality content and give something back to the community and your onto a winner. Great post.
Good points. Knowing the inner workings of a lot of different sites help to drive this home.One site: Pagerank 4 Alexa 500,000 Daily Uniques 1200Another site: Pagerank 4 Alexa 100,000 Daily Uniques 500I only see these as numbers that show my own progress competing against myself rather than something to compare one site to another.
Great article. Very well written content (which should help your page ranking strangely enough ;)). Seriously though, I think you’ve explained brilliantly what I’ve felt for quite a while now. I’ll have to reference your article when I try to explain to others how PageRank is not the be-all-end-all.
Great… nice and simple. I too am never understanding the buzz about Page Rank and the mis-education that SEO professionals allow when consulting with clients who don’t know better.I think the issue is also that Page Rank is used as the word to describe your SEO worth in the industry, rather than being one part of the bigger picture. Some people realise this when referencing it, others don’t.
PR its just a step to get better position in Google. Than more links than better - like my here. By the way recomendation is good way to get some customers (thats tip for company websites). THX
Great article! - seems pagerank is down at the moment, use it to check www.ideallights.co.uk and it returned 0, tried other links and theyre 0 too….seems all the servers dead, has been for past day or so
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