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Search Engine Optimization Articles :
Article No 1.
Myths of Google Revealed
Google is the Web's most popular
search engine, powering not only the popular Google.com Website, but
also Yahoo! and AOL. Being listed in Google is very important, and being
listed highly in Google can bring great benefit to your site.
However, there are many myths about how Google works and, while fairly
harmless in themselves, these myths tend to allow people to draw incorrect
conclusions about how Google works. The purpose of this article is to
correct the most popular Google myths.
Myth #1: The Higher Your Google PageRank (PR), the Higher You'll be in the
Search Results Listing
This myth is frequent, and is the source of many complaints. People often
notice that a site with a lower PageRank than theirs is listed above them,
and get upset. While pages with a higher PageRank do tend to rank better,
it is perfectly normal for a site to appear higher in the results listings
even though it has a lower PageRank than competing pages.
To explain this concept without going into too much technical detail, it
is best to think of PageRank as being comprised of two different values.
One value, which we'll call "General PageRank" is nothing more than the
weighting given to the links on your page. This is also the value shown in
the Google Toolbar. This value is used to calculate the weighting of the
links leaving your page, not your search position.
The other value we'll call "Specific PageRank." You see, if PageRank
equated to search engine results rank then Yahoo, the site with the
highest PR, would be listed #1 for every search result. Obviously, that
wouldn't be useful, so what Google does is examine the context of your
incoming links, and only those links that relate to the specific keyword
being searched on will help you achieve a higher ranking for that keyword.
It's very possible for a site with a lower PageRank to in fact have more
on-topic incoming links than a site with a higher PageRank, in which case
the site with a lower PageRank will be listed above its competitor in the
search results for that term.
PageRank aside, there are also other factors that contribute Google search
results -- though PageRank remains the dominant one.
More
Google Myths Revealed
here by Chris Beasley.
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