The Truth about Internal PageRank. Really?21 Jan
As a Web developer I contributed to the construction of many Web sites. There are quite a few I worked on as my individual projects. This was my initial job, developing sites based on a multitude of technologies. The inside vision acquired from that perspective was a good start for SEO. Many site owners have difficulties in understanding that the basic part of SEO relies on the technical part, actually is mostly technical. Search Engines work with algorithms (which in fact are a set of standardized finite set of instructions) and there is nothing mystical within them. Sure, they don’t fully disclose all criteria on which is founded the algorithm, but analyzing the effects can be deducted.
Generally, since I am doing SEO, clients seem to pertain to one of two categories:
1. they don’t understand much; this is a result driven category and it’s easy to deal with them;
2. people that think they know everything about SEO., sometimes difficult to cope with.
As I mentioned in my previous post, there are several factors influencing rankings. I also underscored that SEO mustn’t be the main marketing strategy. This is a major mistake in SEO, confusing SEO with SEM (Search Engine Marketing). We are told: we want “x” number of back links (IBLs) on pages with an internal PageRank higher than “y”. Ouch! Lately, the new trend is to ask IBLs from blog comments with internal PageRank +x of the comments page itself, not site’s PR! More than that, the page should not have more than 20 OBLs (outbound links). Gush, SEO has nothing to do with this habits, though it is clear that sites need incoming links (as much as possible one way). Remember: Search Engines can easily detect clustering sites, when there is an attempt to cross-link them, which lead to no link juice, so don’t try to build “link wheels” or similar strategies based on urban myths. It is important to understand that links should be built as if search engines either don’t exist or don’t evaluate links.
Linking relationships between sites help Search Engines to find new content and determine how reputable the content might be. That provide value beyond Search Engine Optimization. A SEO campaign have to be one part of a broader online marketing strategy. Search Engines look at links and might pass or might not pass value. A non-indexed Web site cannot pass value or the page itself may be conceived so as to pass as little value as possible.
A few terms that describe the value links can pass would be:
1. Visibility – pathway to content;
2. Anchor text – links enhance relevance;
3. Traffic – links on high traffic pages tend to send traffic to their destinatioss;
4. Trust – shows that desitnation should be trusted;
5. Link Weight – called internal PageRank by Google.
Many people wrongly beliee that Link Weight (PR) is crucial to SEO but PR has considerably less impact on Search Engines visibility than people tend to think.
The IBLs are definitely overrated. Most backlinks don’t help with SEs result rankings because of a variety of reasons. They may not pass anchor text, or they not be trusted, or their anchor text might be irrelevant to specific queries. The PR a page can get from a large number of links (IBLs) may help with some search result rankings but most of PR makes little difference on search results (SERPs).

