16 Responses to “What If Google Abandons Page Ranking”

Comments

Read below or add a comment...

  1. I assume people who monetize their blogs (like us) are mostly the ones who give a damn about PR and Alexa. The truth is, PPP is bypassing this game with the implementation of Argus. I assume this Argus will give the advertisers real time numbers and stats.

    If it works for PPP, I do believe other Paid posts companies will start similar platforms. THis will of course reduce their dependancy on Google and other stats measuring means.

    Good or not, I still do not know. One thing for sure, it won’t be as easy in the past getting accepted to write for paid posts without some serious hardwork done to your blogs.

    Yea..I agree that it will be tough when Advertisers are looking for quality alone. At present lots are just looking for a back link, so they are willing to pay even if the blog does not have quality content as long as it has a high rank.

  2. My links have been going like hotcakes on Linkworth and TextLinkAds. The pocket is getting fat indeed. I think now business sites are still scrambling to get text links on blogs because of the hoohaa over links in blog directories. Do go spring cleaning and add some colours to your TLA and LinkWorth’s registers. Once one link got sold, many others will start buying. Even my miserable photo blog also have 6-7 links sold. And I am increasing the price every month. LOL.

    Lilian, you have always been the lucky one. Hahahahaa… I don’t think I will be able to catch up with you even if I go and sprinkle my blog with honey.

  3. Helen – As it is, LinkWorth is already tracking that. You can find my stats through the sidebar. LinkWorth is ahead of the game, not PPP.

  4. I dont believe Google would suffer in any way if they dropped displaying pagerank. The thing is, they could still use pagerank in their calculation of results even if they didn’t display the result to the rest of us.

    You touched upon one of the main problems though…Advertising.

    Text Link Ads admitted themselves several months ago that they only use alexa because there aren’t that many alternatives for ranking traffic. At the moment, several advertising networks use pagerank as their main way of ranking a website so if google dropped pagerank you would see a lot of advertising networks put in a very difficult position ie. they wouldnt be able to rank their publishers to potential advertisers. Publishers would suffer greatly.

    Enjoyed your post as this is something I try to pay attention to :)

    Kevin

    Kevin, Thanks for dropping by and sharing your invaluable opinions. My exact sentiments concerning the Advertising side effects that it will cause.

  5. I don’t think Google will get rid of Page Rank. They may change the name of it some day or not allow us to see it (like they did with supplemental results), but I think Page Rank keeps everyone on their toes. Google wants quality results for their users and when webmasters/bloggers have to continually worry about things like Page Rank and supplemental it kind of ensures that more people will work to provide qaulity web sites/blogs.

    The thing that irritates me is that I see many high-quality sites/blogs with fabulous information with very little Page Rank and then I see crappy sites/link farms with a Page Rank of 5 or higher. Only Google knows how PR is evaluated, but I do think it is time to revamp the system a bit.

    Melissa. Thanks for sharing your views.Ya. it irritates me too to see some blogs that are so crappy but yet so highly ranked.

  6. Google isn’t going to get rid of PageRank soon, and there are all kind of additional factors in ranking.

    I don’t think Google can remove PageRank from the toolbar completely, though they might make it more obfuscated by using a colour coded gradient scale that a human can judge, but would be hard to specify in public – they don’t have to provide a numerical equivalent.

    Why wouldn’t they remove it? Because it is a symbol of trust in their algorithms and certainly in my own mind a better indication than that offered currently by compete, though obviously it has its flaws with high-jacking etc.

    Thanks Andy. It is always good to hear your views. I guess if they decide to do away with Page Rank, then they will have to work out a whole new algorithm to decide which sites are more valuable huh?

  7. The Matt Cutts quote wasn’t about possibly getting rid of PageRank. He just meant that we shouldn’t expect to see the toolbar PR updated right away. PR constantly changes, but it’s only updated on the toolbar (public page rank) every few months. That’s when people can see if their rank is up or down. :)

    It’s also not so much about search engine rankings. There’s “page rank” and then search engine rankings (placement in the SERPs). Despite what a lot of webmasters believe, Google does say PR is considered, but a lot of other things can get high rankings as well. Getting a high PR is more about getting people to pay more money for your links, getting more people interested in things like sponsored posts, etc… because they want to increase their own pagerank for similar reasons.

    Jenn, then I guess having a good page rank does not necessary guarantee get you a good search rank?

  8. That’s right. Good Page Rank doesn’t guarantee good rankings in the SERPs. It’s basically nothing more than a little “badge of honor” for people to brag about something related to their site… and a reason people will pay more for links on your sites (but to appease the Google gods, we’ll pretend I didn’t say that).

Trackbacks

  1. [...] No More Pagerank?: What would happen if Google decided to stop using Pagerank, or at least to stop reporting it publicly? There is an ongoing discussion on this topic. [...]

  2. [...] Zukunft keinen PageRank mehr geben würde? Über diese Möglichkeit hat Costa von Blog Gigs unter “What If Google Abandons Page Ranking” geschrieben. Vielleicht arbeitet Google an einem völlig neuen System, wer weiss? Ich bin gespannt! [...]

  3. [...] What If Google Abandons Page Ranking – Costa from Blog Gigs writes a very good post about Google PageRank – What would happen if PageRank was dropped? [...]

  4. [...] too have an ego. When the posted Money Making Bloggers are Selfish Bloggers and the recent What if Google Abandons Page Ranking and it received some good feed backs from respectable names, I felt good. That was my ego at play. [...]

  5. [...] No More Pagerank?: What would happen if Google decided to stop using Pagerank, or at least to stop reporting it publicly? There is an ongoing discussion on this topic. [...]