PR Brainbuster Question (related to article marketing)

by 3 replies
4
This is a hard one!

It's a known fact that (usually) only usually the root domain of a site will have the highest PR. Any sub page will likely have a lower PR (or none at all). In different circumstances I've noticed the PR completely disappear as soon as I have left the root domain and moved on to a sub page. BTW I use the google toolbar in FF to get this info.

ex.

ww.site1.com has a PR of 9
ww.site1.com/article.php?id=41412 has a PR of 0

example 2

EZA has a high PR of 6

But, if you check the individual articles' pages, they don't have a PR rating according to google toolbar.

There is some inconsistency here i really need cleared up.

My question is: How are we supposed to get our articles a high PR, when subpages don't have a real PR rating?

So why does EZA have such a great rep for getting your articles high in google? If google toolbar isn't showing a high PR, how are they ranking so high?

It appears that PR isn't passed on to the article (or is it)? So how does this affect article marketing? Is there anything that I'm missing?
#main internet marketing discussion forum #article #brainbuster #google #marketing #question #related
  • Subpages do have PR.

    The subpages that you are talking about may not have links pointing to them and therefore have no PR.

    If you have subpages to have PR, then do some link building for those subpages and see the PR go up.

    Hope this helps.

    bye,
    faraz
    • [1] reply
    • I didn't mean to say that no subpages had PR, I know that some do.

      I need to use a better example.

      ===

      EZA has a high PR.

      But, if you check the individual articles' pages, they don't have a high PR rating according to google toolbar. So why does EZA have such a great rep for getting your articles high in google? If google toolbar isn't showing a high PR, how are they ranking so high?

      There is some inconsistency here i really need cleared up.
  • The maximum benefit is going to be when the link to your article happens to be on the homepage of EZA when it gets spidered.

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  • 4

    This is a hard one! It's a known fact that (usually) only usually the root domain of a site will have the highest PR. Any sub page will likely have a lower PR (or none at all). In different circumstances I've noticed the PR completely disappear as soon as I have left the root domain and moved on to a sub page. BTW I use the google toolbar in FF to get this info.