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Do search engines think that your website is spam?
Inbound link analysis: How long can a text link be if it should improve your rankings?
PageRank, TrustRank and your web site
Does your domain name prevent your website from getting high rankings?
Google hypertext matching analysis and search engine optimization (SEO)
How long does it take until Google, Yahoo and other search engines index your website?
Can too many links hurt your web site rankings?
Google's new ranking algorithm - How you can get high rankings on Google
What Google's SEO videos tell you
How long does it take to get top rankings on Google?
How to react to the latest ranking algorithm changes on Google, MSN Search and Yahoo.
Google Analytics - is it worth its price?
How to write a good sales copy
Does your domain name prevent your website from getting high rankings?
Are your AdWords results getting worse?

Google's PageRank - Should it be discontinued?


As you might have noticed, Google wasn't displaying the PageRank information from 27 May to 30 May. The PageRank bar in the Google toolbar was grayed out for every web page. Many webmasters speculated that Google might have discontinued the PageRank information. However, it seems that this was only a temporary glitch and that Google will keep the PageRank display for some time. Is the green PageRank bar really that important? We explained it in the past in this newsletter. The official PageRank value that Google displays in the toolbar has little value for your ranking. A Google employee even said that the PageRank meter was . Many web sites with low PageRank have high rankings on Google. What would happen if Google didn't display the PageRank information anymore? If the PageRank information wasn't available anymore, webmasters wouldn't concentrate on a little green bar in their web browser but on more substantial factors. For example, you could ask yourself the following questions if you want to optimize your web site: Does my web site has enough content that is interesting to web surfers and search engines? Is my web site linked to other web sites that have similar content that might be interesting to my web site visitors? Do other web sites with related content link to my web site so that people who are interested in what I have to offer can find my web site? Does the web page I want to trade links with offer interesting content (no matter what PageRank it might have)? Ironically, that is exactly what Google expects from webmasters. On its official webmaster pages Google writes: "Make pages for users, not for search engines. [...] Would I do this if search engines didn't exist?". What does this mean to your web site? The PageRank of a web page shouldn't be the determining factor when optimizing your web site and choosing link partners. A link partner with a low PageRank that has a similar topic like your site will bring you much better visitors than an unrelated link partner with a high page rank. visitors. One day, that page might have a higher PageRank and it will still link back to you. In addition, the PageRank you see in Google's toolbar is not the PageRank that Google uses for its algorithm. High Google rankings are the result of optimized web page content and good incoming links. If you focus on your web site visitors, and from related web sites, you'll get high rankings on Google and other important search engines (for details see below).

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