10 Hidden Key Facts You Need To Know About Getting To The Top Of Google(Published Article EzineArticles.com) What does it take for a website to get to the coveted top page on Google for a keyword? The team at Google is remarkably skilful at revealing a little information whilst concealing many key facts.
PageRank Google determines PageRank of a webpage in two stages.
The most popular webpages have PR10. PageRank is on a logarithmic rather than a linear scale. Experts are divided as to the base number of the log scale but one group with good quality data, suggest that it is to a base somewhere between 8 and 9. If it is 8 this would mean that for every webpage with PR10 there would be 8 with PR9, 64 with PR 8, 512 with PR7 and 858,993,452 pages with PR0. Google moved ahead of its search engine competitors by incorporating user signals into its positioning algorithm. Initially this focused on PageRank but the recent Panda updates take into account additional signals such as time spent on a website. Reassuringly, published keyword difficulty data analyses before and after Panda have demonstrated that the average HPR-KD for a cohort of 1000 keywords has remained stable. Those webpages that were demoted by Panda have been replaced by others with similar HPR. The majority of respected search engine optimizers have come to the opinion that PageRank has lost most of its earlier importance and many regard PageRank these days as irrelevant. It is impossible, retrospectively, to evaluate the importance of PageRank when it was first introduced into the Google algorithm more than a decade ago. The literature, however, would suggest that the PageRank of the individual page played a major role in determining positioning on SERPs at that time. There are many examples of internal web pages with PR0 having top page positioning on Google for extremely competitive keywords. Clearly, PageRank of internal pages is not currently a major factor in the Google algorithm. It is this observation that has led so many SEO experts to give little import to PageRank in webpage positioning. HomePage PageRank is the top factor in the Google algorithm. The internal webpages with PR0 on the top page of Google for high difficulty keywords, however, are invariably found on websites with HPR of at least 4 and often 6 or more. It became apparent that whereas the PageRank of an internal webpage has no major influence in the Google algorithm, the HomePage PageRank of the website is the top factor. There are also examples of webpages with HPR0 having top page positioning for medium difficulty keywords but careful observation shows that it is the HomePage itself that is competing. This observation formed the basis for the conclusion that Google assumes that the HomePage of a website has the greatest authority and Google is providing a boost to its competitive PR. HomePages with HPR0-4 have their effective HPR boosted to 5. There is no visible increase when the HPR is 5 or greater. Average adjusted HomePage PageRank keyword difficulty - HPR-KD The average adjusted HPR of the webpages on the top Google SERP for a keyword is the best indicator of keyword difficulty (HPR-KD). This can be easily missed as the range of values is small. The HPR-KDs for a series of keywords on Google.co.uk are:-
HPR-KDs are in a narrow range because;
All the webpages on a new Wembley website designer's website when indexed would have PRs of 0. In practice, only the HomePage of the website could compete for any worthwhile keywords because of the G-Factor-2 boost. Experience shows that initially only keywords with HPR-KD 4.3 or less are within range. This Wembley website could from the beginning target 'website designer Wembley' and with appropriate on-page optimisation should reach the top page of Google. The keyword 'website designer North London' would be out of range as the HPR-KD is 4.8. Internal webpages on a new website will have HPRs of 0 and will not be able to compete for any worthwhile keywords. Guidelines have been produced to indicate the minimum HPR a website requires to have any chance of top page positioning for keywords on Google depending on their HPR-KDs. These guidelines differentiate between the required HPR according to whether it is the HomePage or an internal page that will be competing. The guidelines have been produced to show when at least two webpages with equal or lower HPR than the planned competing webpage are likely to be found on the top page of Google. Original Publication - http://ezinearticles.com/?10-Hidden-Key-Facts-You-Need-To-Know-About-Getting-To-The-Top-Of-Google&id=6543308 |
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