Who Stole My Pagerank?

by Alex on February 26, 2011

how to increase and hold onto your pagerank

In an effort to find out why I lost PageRank I have created a definitive guide to the world of PR (not the public relations type, although this post is for you guys ;) )

On this page you will find everything you need to know about:

  • What Google PageRank is
  • How to get more of it.
  • How to Keep it once you have it, and most importantly -
  • Actionable Methods you can take right now to Stop it leaking from your site.

So on with the rant Post…

JUNE 29th 2011. A Quick UPDATE

Google Pagerank has just been updated and it looks like they enjoyed this post immensely. PR3 on this page AND a PR3 on the homepage (among many others)
Clearly the steps I took in this post helped immensely and give more weight to why you should read this post and action accordingly!

_____

Google Recently updated its Pagerank and I was honestly expecting (or hoping) to move to a PageRank of 3. Not only did this not happen – I actually went the other way, and as of Feb11th 2011 AlexWhalley.com has gone from a PR2 to a PR1 website. (not happy Jan)

WTF?

Why The Face indeed.

Before I can even begin to try and understand what I did or didn’t do to earn this demotion I need to understand a little more about what PageRank actually is.

How was Pagerank Born?

PageRank was created by Lawrence ‘Larry’ Page , who also happened to be the guy who created Google too.

Google pagerank origins - how it all started

Larry Page and Sergey Brim met at Stanford

In order to understand how PageRank works, I think it best to share with you how it was born…

After enrolling for a Ph.D. program in computer science at Stanford University, Larry Page was in search of a dissertation theme and considered exploring the mathematical properties of the World Wide Web, understanding its link structure as a huge graph. His supervisor Terry Winograd encouraged him to pursue this idea, which Page later recalled as “the best advice I ever got”. Page then focused on the problem of finding out which web pages link to a given page, considering the number and nature of such backlinks to be valuable information about that page (with the role of citations in academic publishing in mind).[13] In his research project, nicknamed “BackRub”, he was soon joined by Sergey Brin, a fellow Stanford Ph.D. student.[13]

John Battelle, co-founder of Wired magazine, wrote of Page that he had reasoned that the “entire Web was loosely based on the premise of citation – after all, what is a link but a citation? If he could devise a method to count and qualify each backlink on the Web, as Page puts it ‘the Web would become a more valuable place’.” Battelle further described how Page and Brin began working together on the project:

“At the time Page conceived of BackRub, the Web comprised an estimated 10 million documents, with an untold number of links between them. The computing resources required to crawl such a beast were well beyond the usual bounds of a student project. Unaware of exactly what he was getting into, Page began building out his crawler.

To convert the backlink data gathered by BackRub’s web crawler into a measure of importance for a given web page, Sergey Brin (the Co Founder of Google) and Page developed the PageRank algorithm, and realized that it could be used to build a search engine far superior to existing ones. It relied on a new kind of technology that analyzed the relevance of the back links that connected one Web page to another.

In August 1996, the initial version of Google was made available, still on the Stanford University Web site.

In 1998, Brin and Page founded Google, Inc. Page ran Google as co-president along with Brin until 2001 when they hired Eric Schmidt as Chairman and CEO of Google. In January 2011 Google announced that Page would replace Schmidt as CEO in April the same year. Both Page and Brin earn an annual compensation of one dollar. On April 4, 2011, Page will officially become the chief executive officer of Google, while Schmidt steps down to become executive chairman.

Pretty cool huh?

Not only do I find this fascinating, I think it answers the question of what PageRank actually is. The first thing of note is that PageRank has nothing to do with a website Page and everything to do with a ‘let’s name it after Larry’  Page. Why they could not have named it after Brin and made life easy for everyone is beyond me, but I do think they did it on purpose. Sure, PR relates to the page in question, but the PageRank that we have come to know and cherish so much is actually representative of your site as a whole.

What Exactly is Pagerank then?

understanding pagerank is impossible if you see the algorithm

Riiiiiight.

PageRank is a numeric value that represents how important a page is on the web. Google figures that when one page links to another page, it is effectively casting a vote for the other page. The more votes that are cast for a page, the more important the page must be. Also, the importance of the page that is casting the vote determines how important the vote itself is.

So basically, the more votes (links) you have coming in, and the higher the relevance and authority of that link – the better your own PageRank gets. I would refer to the algorithm on the left but I had trouble returning the variables on k, and the associative properties of x are not congruent with the cartesian coordinates represented by P above. I therefore CLEARLY do not want to make an idiot of myself. Besides, the first answer I got was actually ‘Green’ so I figured I did something wrong. ;)

 

Factors that Help Increase PageRank.factors that help increase your pagerank

  • Consistently Relevant Content.
    Content is the backbone of an authority site, and only through continuous publication of unique quality content that stays consistent to the niche or subject can you hope to increase your PR.
  • Incoming Links – based on Relevance and Authority
    The more links you have pointing to your site from relevant and high ranking sites the better your own PageRank Gets.
  • Internal Linking – based on relevance and anchor text.
    A website has a maximum amount of PageRank that is distributed between its pages by internal links. The more pages you create – the more PageRank you can potentially have, and this is optimized and strengthened by internally linking any or all applicable pages to each other with the relevant anchor text.
  • Outbound Links – based on relevance and authority
    It is a crucial part of good SEO practice to make a habit of linking out to authority sites and relevant pages at least once every few posts as this helps to increase your rank for whatever keyphrases you are talking about and hyperlinking – but this is not necessarily so good for your overall PageRank. Outbound links are a drain on a site’s total PageRank. They Leak PageRank, and so it’s always good practice to make sure the site you are linking to has a higher PR than you and/or is relevant.

Factors that Cause You To Lose Pagerank.

factors that cause you to lose pagerank

Outgoing Links.

Although Outgoing Links are a necessary part of Good SEO and in turn, increased PageRank – there are two elements to this factor that started setting off alarm bells in my head.

To Increase SEO (and therefore Pagerank) an outgoing link has to meet two criteria:

  • Relevant Content on the page being linked to.
  • High PR, or at least an authority site. (By authority I mean a page that is either on a High PR site or a page/site that is clearly busy (traffic and conversation wise)

What does this mean for AlexWhalley.com?

With 130 or so posts and over 5500 comments, to say I have a quiet blog is an understatement, but it seems to have come at a cost.
If Non Relevant and low quality outbound links are a drain on your overall Pagerank, then the 3400 or so comments that are not mine are clearly having an effect, so drastic action is required.

As of the 23rd February 2011 Alexwhalley.com is a no-follow comments blog . Keyword Luv has also been removed as this is just adding insult to injury if I leave it there.

I truly believe that every single person who comments on this site does so because of the engaging content and thriving conversation that it generates. I do not think removing the follow attribute will effect my number of comments and the way in which this community engages because, well for one thing – I’m only a PR1 now!!
I will leave this set to no follow until the next Pagerank update. Only then will I know if it has had an effect at all? Remember though, I’m still a do follow blog – so if you really want that backlink, send me a guest post!

Two Many Websites Trying To Rank.

Increase Pagerank and stop competing against your own site for rankings!

Were you aware that in the eyes of Google you potentially have two identical websites?
As far as the Search Engines are concerned, http://alexwhalley.com and http://www.alexwhalley.com are two different sites! If I don’t fix this then the following occurs:

  • I risk having pages on one version of the site or the other deindexed because of duplicate content issues
  • If I am linked to by other bloggers, then depending on whether they are a ‘www’ person or a non www person, the link could go to either site.
  • I lose the total control of how many backlinks point to my site basically, because I have two of them.

But there is a way to fix this. It’s called URL normalization (or URL canonicalization) but considering that I almost got my tongue caught around my inner ear trying to say that second one, I’ll just stick with normalization thanks!

Ana Hoffman actually posted a how to guide for fixing this, but in her effort to keep things as non technical as possible for her readers, she confused the hell out of me!
Each to their own I suppose – so if my process below confuses you, check out Ana’s post – because it will definitely be for you then. WWW vs non-WWW: Why You Should Put All Your Links in One Basket

If however you refuse to do anything unless the exact technical specifications have been laid out and all the facts have been presented, then Chris Burns of BurnSEO has a post for you.
Chris has written a detailed post where you will find a more technical explanation of how to make your sites canonically correct at How to Make your Site Canonical Friendly

Now I am not techie at all but this is one process that even I could manage, so allow me to show you how to ‘Put All Your Links in One Basket’ (thanks Ana ;) )

*whether you choose to go with the WWW version or the non WWW version is completely up to you.

How to Redirect your WWW and non WWW addresses

It’s called a 301 Redirect and it’s really easy.

Simple log into your HOSTing account (CPanel) and look for something like this: (I am with HostGator, FYI)

Redirect options are located in your host account cpanel

 

When you click on this, the very first Redirect option that greets you is a (Permanent)301. This is the one you want.
The screenshot below is exactly what you would do if you wanted to redirect your site from www to non www, which is the format I prefer.

301 Redirect from www.alexwhalley.com to alexwhalley.com

 

301-redirect options within your host cpanelThe Options below the address field include various redirection options, but the first one (www. Redirection: ) is the one you will pick – regardless of which way you are redirecting things.
The other options are more for when you want to redirect one site to another and control whether the www goes there too.
The Wild Card Redirect is…strange to say the least, but not as strange as the warning the preceeds it:
Checking the Wild Card Redirect Box will redirect all files within a directory to the same filename in the redirected directory.
Huh??! I think Dr Suess wrote that one.

So what Now?

Now that you have redirected your site and merged your two versions into one, there is nothing more you need to worry about. From this point forward, regardless of whether someone links to you through www.yourdomain or http://yourdomain – only the one site you specified above will ever receive the link and the recognition that goes with it.

Your 404’s are not Re-Directing Either

We all know the dreaded 404 Error, the one you get when the page you click on is simply not there.
If you are not keeping track of your error links and not redirecting known 404 pages, you are quite simply leaving PageRank Juice on the table.
I see this happen way too often when bloggers go back and change their post titles for better SEO, but inadvertently change the Permalink too. Result – a big fat 404 and no love from Google for that.
What’s worse is that link could have been one you took ages to earn, and is sitting there keyword optimised and everything.

A Great Plugin, which I only found today and installed earlier is called ‘Redirection’ (available Here: http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/redirection/

This plugin actually enables you to do 301 redirections from within wordpress, keep track of your 404 error pages, and then of course set 301 redirections on them as well.
What this means in English (in case I lost you at 123456 etc) is that you can keep your PR by redirecting all bad links to good pages instead :)

Your Ping List is Terrible

learning ping pong will not get you noticed by the search engines

Not Ping PONG!?! I don’t care how good you get, you’ll still need to copy the list below!

The Reason Google loves your WordPress blog so much is because it has the ability to notify (via a PING) the search Engines everytime you make a change or add content.

The Settings for this are located in your Writing settings (at the very bottom under Update Services) in your Admin Panel and one of two mistakes can happen:

You have only the one ping service that WordPress gave you by default.
You probably didnt even know it was there (maybe)- so when you create a post it is not being crawled and indexed by the search engines first. You want the page content indexed first, but by the time your RSS feed has gone through, chances are that is what will get indexed instead! This is not helping your Pagerank people.

You have too many Ping services listed, and the Search Engines now hate you!
Many of the Ping services have inbuilt notifiers that will then ping other services. If you have hundreds of ping services listed and they all double up and ping each other the same information every time you publish something, pretty soon the Search Engines just assume you are Spam and do not give you the credit you deserve.

Here is my personal Ping Service List, and although extensive, it has never had me banned from any service or search engine. (Feel free to CTRL A – CTRL C it over to your Writing Settings page ;) )

http://blogsearch.google.com/ping/RPC2

http://1470.net/api/ping

http://api.feedster.com/ping

http://api.moreover.com/RPC2

http://api.moreover.com/ping

http://api.my.yahoo.com/RPC2

http://api.my.yahoo.com/rss/ping

http://bblog.com/ping.php

http://bitacoras.net/ping

http://blog.goo.ne.jp/XMLRPC

http://blogdb.jp/xmlrpc

http://blogmatcher.com/u.php

http://bulkfeeds.net/rpc

http://coreblog.org/ping/

http://mod-pubsub.org/kn_apps/blogchatt

http://www.lasermemory.com/lsrpc/

http://ping.amagle.com/

http://ping.bitacoras.com

http://ping.blo.gs/

http://ping.bloggers.jp/rpc/

http://ping.cocolog-nifty.com/xmlrpc

http://ping.blogmura.jp/rpc/

http://ping.exblog.jp/xmlrpc

http://ping.feedburner.com

http://ping.myblog.jp

http://ping.rootblog.com/rpc.php

http://ping.syndic8.com/xmlrpc.php

http://ping.weblogalot.com/rpc.php

http://ping.weblogs.se/

http://pingoat.com/goat/RPC2

http://rcs.datashed.net/RPC2/

http://rpc.blogbuzzmachine.com/RPC2

http://rpc.blogrolling.com/pinger/

http://rpc.icerocket.com:10080/

http://rpc.newsgator.com/

http://rpc.pingomatic.com

http://rpc.technorati.com/rpc/ping

http://rpc.weblogs.com/RPC2

http://topicexchange.com/RPC2

http://trackback.bakeinu.jp/bakeping.php

http://www.a2b.cc/setloc/bp.a2b

http://www.bitacoles.net/ping.php

http://www.blogdigger.com/RPC2

http://www.blogoole.com/ping/

http://www.blogoon.net/ping/

http://www.blogpeople.net/servlet/weblogUpdates

http://www.blogroots.com/tb_populi.blog?id=1

http://www.blogshares.com/rpc.php

http://www.blogsnow.com/ping

http://www.blogstreet.com/xrbin/xmlrpc.cgi

http://www.mod-pubsub.org/kn_apps/blogchatter/ping.php

http://www.newsisfree.com/RPCCloud

http://www.newsisfree.com/xmlrpctest.php

http://www.popdex.com/addsite.php

http://www.snipsnap.org/RPC2

http://www.weblogues.com/RPC/

http://xmlrpc.blogg.de

http://xping.pubsub.com/ping/

You’re not listed in DMOZ

Okay this one is harder than it sounds. DMOZ is the open source directory… the biggest in fact. More so than Google.
Getting listed in DMOZ is the equivelent of  a PR Guarantee. Why? The DMOZ directory is run by real people so the content there is ONLY PURE AWESOMENESS.
When should you apply for a DMOZ listing?  When you’re blog starts seeing some traffic, comments, and decent posts… it’s probably a good time to submit. Remember that REAL live people edit each submission… you’ve got to impress someone, not just meet some mathematical criterion. By Getting your site listed in DMOZ you are almost guaranteed to avoid being sandboxed, losing Pagerank or being deindexed.
Good luck finding an applicable category that is still accepting  submissions though ;)

 

What has all this taught me?

Nothing, my brain hurts, and I somehow managed to turn the notes I have been taking into a swan – and I don’t even know Origami!

I have however made a few small changes to the blog, including the implementing of the 301 Redirect, the removal of the follow attribute from the comments, and multiple attempts to get my site listed in DMOZ. One thing I have not looked at is how much all of this actually matters anyway.

Does Pagerank Even Matter?

does pagerank even matter, will you shut up about pagerank

After all of this, and after whinging and moaning to my wife about it (who just looks at me like I have syphilis) I should actually be asking the most important question, and that is whether Pagerank even matters, or at least how much bearing it has on things.

First and foremost, in the Blogosphere that we inhabit, social media and community rules – so to a large point Pagerank really doesnt matter.
I linked to Ana Hoffman’s post earlier, and she is the perfect example of why PR does not matter. Her Blog – Traffic Generation Cafe, which still has a PR of 0(??!) sees more than 10,000 unique visitors a month and has an Alexa Ranking of under 15,000! Check out some of her Internet Marketing Tools while you are there.
I don’t know about you, but I’d rather that than a good PR anyday!

But…

If you own a blog that has a high PR then you literally halve the amount of necessary backlinks to get your pages ranked. A High Pagerank is like a pat on the back from the President. If Google thinks your OK then EVERYONE thinks your OK. Simple as that.

*A Great tool I recently found for finding High PR backlinks from your competition is Backlink Profit Monster. Read my Full Review Here. Backlink Profit Monster Review

Marketing Takeaway.

Pagerank is an important aspect that provides you with the authority needed to really make a difference in your niche, but it is also only one factor in a sea of variables and traffic sources. The power of social media, community and general engagement can NEVER be underestimated, so get out there and share the love. If you want to increase or keep your Pagerank then it’s simple:
Follow the advice of this post and just ‘be aware’ of what Google is looking for, but continue to blog and market as you have always done.

Remember that the community around you is something tangible, the algorithm … yeah I’m thinking not.

 

What Do You Think? (post is 2982 words long so you MUST be thinking something ;) )

 

 

 

 

{ 126 comments… read them below or add one }

shaggy rugs April 29, 2011 at 8:38 PM

Are high pagerank (5-7) sites relevant when it comes to SEO in Google?Giving the situation that I have a keyword I want to rank for that show up in broad and phrase searches. Would it be more diffiicult to outrank these High Pagerank websites.

Reply

KimDS May 13, 2011 at 8:11 PM

Hi Alex,
I’ve been reading this post with great interest. I am doing a lot of research on SEO and trying to understand google because I will be launching my new blog in about a week or so, and I want to do it right from the start. Now the one thing that makes me wondering is this: I will have my blog in my main language, which is Dutch. I have already written a couple of posts (even though they’re not online yet) in which I link to blogs relevant to my niche but they’re in English. Is google that smart to see these sites are relevant to my content?
There are very, very few blogs or sites in my niche that are in Dutch, so I’m sure most of my outgoing links will go to international sites. After reading your post, I’m concerned about that.

Reply

Alex May 13, 2011 at 10:42 PM

Hi Kim,

Thanks for such an interesting question. I never really thought about this aspect, which is why I never mentioned it – nor does anyone for that matter. You will be happy to know however that Google does indeed see relevant content in every language. Regardless of whether you are speaking English or double Dutch for that matter, Google translates it all into one language before running its ‘algorithm’

Thanks for taking the time to stop by and comment today Kim. Great question too!

Reply

Austin May 18, 2011 at 5:47 AM

I made the changes to redirect non-WWW to WWW at my hosting account as well as updated my Ping Service List to match yours and my site that was comfortably sitting int he top 5 for multiple keywords is not not even in the top 1000!

This was the only change I made… any thoughts or advice?!?!?

Traffic today is down nearly 100% (obviously) and I’m not happy!!!

I’d be careful to try these changes on your site based on my results…

Reply

Austin May 18, 2011 at 9:44 AM

Do I revert back to the old settings? Should I undo the 301 direct and go back to the single Ping Service that WP set me up with? Or is the damage already done?

I had worked hard to get to the top 5 in Google for a bunch of targeted KWs and was converting nearly 6% of my Amazon visitors. Just like that all that hard work is down the drain…

If anyone has any advise on how to recover from this catastrophe please feel free to comment. I’m all ears!

Thanks in advance!

Reply

Alex May 18, 2011 at 11:11 AM

Hey Austin,

I sent you an email as soon as I got your first comment, so sorry to hear about what is happening mate.

I am honestly stumped as I have never experienced this, nor has anyone I know who uses similar methods.
I know for a fact that the ping list will not make the slightest difference from a negative sense, especially since your site is already indexed and ranking well.
The 301redirect should increase your PR over time as all links pointing in will now redirect to one site version, but looking at your results my only guess is that somehow by doing your 301 it has decided to ignore any links without the WWW.
This of course makes no sense, but to be honest – you losing rank like that doesn’t make any sense either!

My only recommendation would be to remove the 301 redirect and see what happens.

On another note, I am surprised that your rankings updated so quickly too.
The whole thing seems rather fishy if you ask me.

Again, sorry to hear about your issues Austin, I do feel crap because it was my advise that got you into this mess in the first place.
I hope this advice helps and you get your rank back my friend.

Let me know

Reply

Austin May 19, 2011 at 3:12 PM

Don’t feel bad… it’s not the end of the world (just the end of my search visitors!). I thought about leaving the 301 to see if my rank would come back or start to improve over time but decided to stop the redirect to see if it would snap back. I checked copyscape to see if someone had copied content making Google see my site and not-unique but that’s not the case either.

Should I start a backlinking campaign to try to regain rank? Or just leave it and see what happens? That’s the hardest part right now… I’m not sure what to do moving forward? Register a new domain, recreate the content and start over? Or keep working the original site to see if I can get it back to the top 5?

What do you think?

Reply

Alex May 24, 2011 at 11:01 PM

Just leave it and see what happens.
I would remove redirect and then focus back on some article marketing.
I think maybe you are in the sandbox to be honest.

It is the only way to explain the drop. Somehow the redirect scrambled something and pissed the bots off?
The good news is that in a month or so you will be out and your traffic will ‘seemingly magically’ reappear overnight.

I’ll talk to a mate of mine that got sandboxed a whole heap to confirm if this is the case or not.

Alex May 18, 2011 at 11:17 AM

That’s just crazy!

See my reply to your next comment my friend, hope we can sort this crap out

Reply

Austin July 14, 2011 at 2:04 PM

Alex & your loyal readers,

I wanted to stop back and update you on the progress of this site. It’s been almost two months since my fall from Google’s good graces. My traffic drop was catastrophic but I am starting to recover. I have made it back to page 1 for a number of my keywords and most of my site is now PR2. I’m still not fully recovered but I wanted to let you know that I was to quick to assume that it was the suggestions that Alex made that killed my rank!

After much investigation I’m not sure what got me sandboxed but I’m 99% sure it wasn’t this as I tried it on a couple of my other niche sites and had no ill effect.

So Alex, I’m sorry if you or any of your readers thought I was throwing you or your ideas under the bus. That was not my intention. I overreacted as my biggest income generating niche site got hit by the Google slap and it really hurt!

Thanks for all the golden nuggets of info you post on here.

Take care,

Austin

Reply

Alex July 17, 2011 at 10:24 AM

Hey Austin,

Mate I am so glad to hear that. I appreciate you taking the time to come and update us on your situation, and don’t worry – I never took anything you said as a personal attack. In fact you went out of your way to show total objectivity toward the whole situation.

Take care my friend – I hope to see you around soon :)

Reply

fesbuk May 19, 2011 at 7:32 AM

Thanks for such an interesting question. I never really thought about this aspect, which is why I never mentioned it – nor does anyone for that matter. You will be happy to know however that Google does indeed see relevant content in every language. Regardless of whether you are speaking English or double Dutch for that matter, Google translates it all into one language before running its ‘algorithm’

Reply

fesbuk May 19, 2011 at 7:33 AM

Are high pagerank (5-7) sites relevant when it comes to SEO in Google?Giving the situation that I have a keyword I want to rank for that show up in broad and phrase searches. Would it be more diffiicult to outrank these High Pagerank websites.

Reply

Alex May 24, 2011 at 11:04 PM

Ummm, does a bear shit in the woods?

No seriously though, yes sites with a PR over 5 are very very hard to outrank.

Reply

Canon G11 Price June 4, 2011 at 1:06 PM

Thanks a lot for this. We explained.

I have never had a site that was ranked but recently bought a few sites from flippa and they are ranked so I gotto work towards keeping them ranked!

Thanks again

Reply

Leah Whitehorse July 3, 2011 at 11:27 PM

Hi. I just found this post after noticing my pagerank has dropped from 4 to 3 and I was not happy, especially as my traffic and subscribers has been growing. I found it all very confusing and a bit disheartening.
Thank you so much for such a comprehensive post and for giving some suggestions of definitive action to take! I’m off to implement this now.

Reply

John July 26, 2011 at 10:07 PM

I am depressed at all the energy you youngsters are putting into Google which is getting more difficult by the day. Without a doubt Google is important but it is not the only game in town. The strategy has to be how do we use Google to diversify so that it is is a small part of our income? Having said that, there are as I see it, still opportunities in Google Local, Google foreign, video, and You Tube. The newcomers Facebook and Mobile Marketing appear to be great opportunities.
My immediate problem is to learn how to use my Toshiba laptop to make videos and Windows 7 to compile them. Know any teachers of these skills ? Competitive tuition rates available. Location St Ives. All emails marked “John’s Tuition” stating required rates will be answered.

Reply

Alex July 28, 2011 at 10:04 PM

Yeah but everything you mentioned relies on Google to survive.
On another note, are you really in St Ives? That’s like 5 minutes from me!

Reply

Michael Palm Desert December 29, 2011 at 12:20 PM

Great information in this post. Glad to see that you are back up at PR3 too. Do you have any tips for increasing PR (other than those above) for non content heavy sites? Such as a personal portfolio site, company site, etc.? It seems as though blogs and content generators thrive much easier…

Reply

Alex January 5, 2012 at 1:23 PM

True, and great question Michael.
I think in the case of sites that are not based on a heavy content filled backend it comes down to the incoming links. You can always create seperate sites/blogs/web2.0 properties that ARE filled with quality content and then linking back to your site with them. This is what an SEO company would do for you anyway as Google gives as much credit to the outbound link source – especially when it comes from relevant and updated content.

Man, could I have worded that response any worse?!?! LOL – sorry about that

Reply

craig@ how to play guitar January 6, 2012 at 10:32 AM

Page rank is a strange thing.

I have a page rank of zero on one of my sites
but seem to be able to outrank page with a
page rank of 3 or 4.

It makes you wonder.

Craig

Reply

KT@ english to korean translation February 12, 2012 at 4:49 AM

The history of how page rank was developed was very interesting. I wonder how and when PR values are assigned. Is a PR score created every time a new link is made? Or, is a fixed value assigned to a Web page once when it’s first authored and the value is simply split for outbound links?

Reply

Brennan@OnlySEO Australia February 27, 2013 at 11:17 PM

Hi Alex, one of 650+ stumblers coming through here. Can you backlog your posts to nofollow the old comments? that would help with the outgoing links. If your other posts are as interesting as this, then you will have your PR back in no time :)

Reply

Alex March 1, 2013 at 11:54 PM

Hey thanks for the tip Brennan – but in this case I think its more about a lack of content and social engagement – or ANY engagement for that matter that caused my recent PR slump.
Meh – whatcha gonna do. LOL
Thanks for the value add

Reply

Brennan@OnlySEO Australia March 20, 2013 at 8:47 AM

gave you a retweet and a G+ none the less, hope it helps :P

Reply

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