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Google page rank is irrelevant

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Google page rank is irrelevant
Published by SEO Juice

http://www.seo-juice.co.uk

15/10/11









Google PageRank is irrelevant

The purpose of this article is to explain the floors in the PageRank system, propose

recommended solutions and to make Google search benefit small businesses as well as the

multinational companies.





SECTIONS IN THIS ARTICLE



• Introduction

• Why PageRank is irrelevant

• PageRelevance™ implementation

• Anchor text is for accessibility not for page ranking

• A PageRelevance™ score from back links

• Underhand practices that need to be addressed now

• Buying links and friends

• Support my vision



INTRODUCTION



Firstly, this is NOT a Google bashing document. Google provides some extremely useful

free tools that we would all be lost without and they deserve credit for all that hard work.

This article will be frank and cut to the point as well as offering future algorithmic

recommendations. The information in this article is purely based on facts, explaining the

reason why the PageRank system is floored and why the big players will always stifle the

small fish in Google’s search engine.



So, if you aren’t doing as well in Google’s search engine as you would like to, then have a

read of this article. It will tell you why sites are in the position they are in and what needs to

be done to level the playing field for smaller businesses, going forward.





WHY PAGERANK IS IRRELEVANT



PageRank is a number given to each page on a website to show its authority and so called

“relevance”. An inbound link coming from a PageRank 6 page carries a lot more weight than

a page with a PageRank of 2. So, depending on the inbound link, your destination page will

then get some PageRank increase from the page that is linking to it. The PageRank increase

is only nominal so the more links you have coming into one of your pages, the higher the

PageRank will be over time.



Just so you know that the PageRank score will not get you to position 1 in the SERPs alone,

so don’t spend your life getting this figure as high as possible.



Now here is where “relevancy” comes into it.



Did you know that http://mydomain.com could get a page rank of 4 from just 18 pages that

have a PageRank of 4 linking to it?



Did you also know that if http://mydomain.com was selling dog food and all the links coming

into the site were from sweet shops, that it would still get a PageRank with possibly a few

more additional irrelevant inks? What is the connection between dog food and sweets,

none! I’ve personally seen links from 100% irrelevant sites promote pages on another site

that have no bidirectional relevancy whatsoever, increase the page’s ranking in the SERPs.



PageRank is floored and a move to PageRelevance™ is required, and Larry, you still get your

name in their:-). So, this is my recommendation on why PageRank as a ranking factor has to

be changed.





PAGERELEVANCE™ IMPLEMENTATION



Now, in an ideal world, PageRank would be abolished for PageRelevance™ and here is how

it would work.



Every webpage on the Internet would have a Zone Meta tag, possibly abolish the keywords

tag to make way for this as keywords are not even used by Google anymore and Bing just

use them to detect spammers. The Zone tag could even be included in the HTML 5 standard

that will be released soon.



The tag would look something like this:





The tag would tell you about the relevancy of the page and you would only be permitted

to have 5 Zone tags per page. These tags tell you what the page is all about and ultimately

what it is “relevant to”.



When Google’s crawl bot comes along to scan the page, the Zone Meta tags are the first

thing it will look at. The crawl bot will then look at the content on the page and work out if

it is relevant to the Zone tags. This would be done by looking at keywords on the page and

also by looking at a thesaurus for synonyms to further improve the relevancy score. A score

for this on-page SEO criterion would then be accredited to the overall PageRelevance™

score for the webpage.



So ideally, 50% of the PageRelevance™ score would come from pure on-page SEO content.

Targeted pages that are on topic are what people are looking for.



Another 25% of the PageRelevance™ score should come from elements such as:



• Domain age.

• Page speed.

• Mobile versions available.

• Other on-page SEO elements that aid usability like anchor text & alt tag usage.

The other 25% of the PageRelevance™ score will come from “relevant back links”, which I’ll

cover later. At the moment far too much weighting goes towards PageRank from irrelevant

back links. It’s not about link juice anymore but pure SEO Juice.





ANCHOR TEXT IS FOR ACCESSIBILITY NOT FOR PAGE RANKING



Anchor text is used on websites to improve usability and to allow screen readers to speak

to visually impaired users to help navigate a website. So, why does anchor text in back links

improve the rankings of webpages so much?



This is one that has raked my brains and here is why.

I have analysed two websites that rank for a quite competitive keyword in their industry.

Both pages that are ranking highly for their keyword term have 1 and 0 references to the

keyword on their pages respectively!



Do you know why these pages are ranking in almost 1st position in Google for their keyword

terms? Well, it’s all down to the back links coming into the website with the keyword(s) in the

anchor text. Argggghh! What is the point of on-page SEO!!!! And furthermore, the majority

of the back links to the pages are useless, they have no relevance to the content on the site

and the majority of the links would never be seen or clicked on. This is why PageRelevance™

has to be adopted and soon. On-page SEO has to take priority in the ranking of pages, not

the thousands of irrelevant backlinks that I see day after day.





A PAGERELEVANCE™ SCORE FROM BACK LINKS



Websites on the internet will link to you, it’s only natural, well it should be. What I do disagree

with though is irrelevant sites linking to others and improving the domain authority of the

recipient’s site from a link that adds no value to both sites.



Some websites have thousands of irrelevant root domain links, and the bigger companies

out there that know what they are doing when it comes to SEO, have thousands to spend

on a back linking program. Little Jo’s PC Repair business on the high street only has £100

a month to spend on a back linking program. Guess who will always come out on top,

providing they were using the same anchor text and similar high PageRank back linking

sites?



So, the big fish will always get bigger whilst the little ones just look up feeling a little

cheated. Is this any way to treat new small business start-ups? They don’t stand a chance of

competing with the big players. SO, this is where my PageRelevance™ algorithm will come

into its own.



A site of

I have no way of tracking the tag above but I’m sure Google can when they next perform a

crawl of the Internet, and possibly start factoring this in to future updates.



Thank you for reading.


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