How to get high PR to a blog?

10 replies
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Lets say I have a blog that I want as high PR on as possible. Is it more to it than having links to it from high PR pages and adding content on a regular basis?
#blog #high
  • Profile picture of the author Arivin90
    Many backlink is main factor to get high PR epecially domain extension like .edu/.gov will give more effect to boost your PR than others extension. and keep update the content. thanks
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    • Profile picture of the author gjedda63
      Originally Posted by Arivin90 View Post

      Many backlink is main factor to get high PR epecially domain extension like .edu/.gov will give more effect to boost your PR than others extension. and keep update the content. thanks
      Does extentions like .edu, .gov have the same effect as before? some says no while others says it still have the huge effect as always.
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      • Profile picture of the author Arivin90
        Originally Posted by gjedda63 View Post

        Does extentions like .edu, .gov have the same effect as before? some says no while others says it still have the huge effect as always.
        Personally, I think majority .edu/.gov extension has authorized by google and has high Page Rank plus quality contents
        Thanks!!!
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  • Profile picture of the author nettech
    Develop quality content that people want to read. The content shoudl be compelling enough for peopel to link to it.

    You can submit RSS feeds, get lots of forum profiles, submit to article directories such as Ezines, GoArticles, Blog Commenting and obviously don't forget social bookmarking every single page if your site as possible.

    Hope that helps

    Zaheer
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    Thanks
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  • Profile picture of the author ebiz101
    Just keep on building links from high PR sites of your niche related and always add new content to your blog.
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  • Profile picture of the author jasonmorgan
    blah blah blah... ignore most of the previous posts. It's a lot of garbage.

    Personally, I think majority .edu/.gov extension has authorized by google and has high Page Rank plus quality contents
    Matt Cutts of google completely disagrees with you... you're passing along incorrect information. Stop spreading the ignorance.

    To raise the page rank of your site you need backlinks from other pages with page rank themselves... it is that simple.

    The higher the page rank of the page linking to you the more benefit you are going to receive.

    content relevance and domain extension (.com, .edu etc... ) are not going to make a difference.... at least nobody can prove that they do make a difference. You can file that info in the crap file with the rest of the SEO gossip and theories.

    here is an older chart to give you an idea of what you need to raise your sites page rank.... yes, the number of outbound links on a page will dilute the value of page rank passed along to your site so these numbers are not 100% accurate but you get the idea.


    (should be a picture here if my mad hotlinking skills worked)

    so... go find some pages with some page rank and less than 100 outbound links and you can fire up your own page rank fairly easy... but you're not going to see the effects until the next google page rank update... only happens about 5 times a year.
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    • Profile picture of the author gjedda63
      Originally Posted by jasonmorgan View Post

      blah blah blah... ignore most of the previous posts. It's a lot of garbage.


      Matt Cutts of google completely disagrees with you... you're passing along incorrect information. Stop spreading the ignorance.

      To raise the page rank of your site you need backlinks from other pages with page rank themselves... it is that simple.

      The higher the page rank of the page linking to you the more benefit you are going to receive.

      content relevance and domain extension (.com, .edu etc... ) are not going to make a difference.... at least nobody can prove that they do make a difference. You can file that info in the crap file with the rest of the SEO gossip and theories.

      here is an older chart to give you an idea of what you need to raise your sites page rank.... yes, the number of outbound links on a page will dilute the value of page rank passed along to your site so these numbers are not 100% accurate but you get the idea.


      (should be a picture here if my mad hotlinking skills worked)

      so... go find some pages with some page rank and less than 100 outbound links and you can fire up your own page rank fairly easy... but you're not going to see the effects until the next google page rank update... only happens about 5 times a year.
      Thanks Jasonmorgan,
      From this chart I can expect a PR3 after the next update.
      According to this chart; if I only had 1000 profile links with N/A or PR0 I wouldnt see any rise in PR at all ?
      What about this scenario ; A new blog with sufficient content adding over a three months period has only three links, a PR5, a PR6 and a PR7, would this give the blog a PR6 after the next update?
      I understand that this is hard to determine if your not a google engineer, but any suggestions?
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      • Profile picture of the author HCLee
        You should not focus on getting high PR as a main goal. Getting lots of backlinks is the key to search engine success but you are correct that you should be adding content regularly because that adds value to your site. But focus on high quality high PR sites even sites not relevant to your niche. They will eventually bring you up in the search engine and possibly a high PR.
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  • Profile picture of the author jasonmorgan
    According to this chart; if I only had 1000 profile links with N/A or PR0 I wouldnt see any rise in PR at all ?
    What about this scenario ; A new blog with sufficient content adding over a three months period has only three links, a PR5, a PR6 and a PR7, would this give the blog a PR6 after the next update?
    I understand that this is hard to determine if your not a google engineer, but any suggestions?
    there are a couple of charts like this floating around that give slightly different numbers and yes, only a google engineer really knows the truth.

    The thing to keep in mine with page rank is that the more outbound links on a page the more that page rank is diluted. A PR 7 page with 500 outbound links is not going to give the same amount of link juice as a PR 7 page with 50 outbound links. So these numbers are sorta a best case senario.

    But theoretically, get a couple of solid PR 3 - 5 backlinks and your site should hit PR 3.

    I ran a little test with SEO spyglass on a PR 3 site of mine. After filtering out nofollows, according to SEO spyglass, the site has 11 PR 4 backlinks, 6 PR 3 backlinks, 20 PR 2 backlinks and 12 PR 1 backlinks. There are also a couple hundred PR n/a backlinks as well.

    Many of these backlinks were created after that last google PR update but it does give an idea of what you need in order to reach PR 3. I suspect with the next update the site will probably bump up to a PR 4.
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    • Profile picture of the author gjedda63
      Originally Posted by jasonmorgan View Post

      there are a couple of charts like this floating around that give slightly different numbers and yes, only a google engineer really knows the truth.

      The thing to keep in mine with page rank is that the more outbound links on a page the more that page rank is diluted. A PR 7 page with 500 outbound links is not going to give the same amount of link juice as a PR 7 page with 50 outbound links. So these numbers are sorta a best case senario.

      But theoretically, get a couple of solid PR 3 - 5 backlinks and your site should hit PR 3.

      I ran a little test with SEO spyglass on a PR 3 site of mine. After filtering out nofollows, according to SEO spyglass, the site has 11 PR 4 backlinks, 6 PR 3 backlinks, 20 PR 2 backlinks and 12 PR 1 backlinks. There are also a couple hundred PR n/a backlinks as well.

      Many of these backlinks were created after that last google PR update but it does give an idea of what you need in order to reach PR 3. I suspect with the next update the site will probably bump up to a PR 4.
      Ok,so the golden rules when aiming for high PR to your site is to have as little outbound links as possible. But certainly not if high rankings is your goal.
      The background for this thread is that I have a .edu blog which I want as high PR to as possible and use it as linkbait.
      What would you say the value of this edu blog as linkbait would be if it had low PR (PR1-2) ?
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