Google’s PageRank
Specifically, Google considers the quantity, quality and anchor text of back
links when determining PageRank, whereas Yahoo and MSN rely heavily upon the
quantity of a site’s back links when ranking pages. This is the primary
difference between the main search engines. In essence, the search engine companies
have determined the web community should vote upon popular and important websites
by linking to them. Therefore, the quantity and quality of votes are important
factors search engines consider when ranking websites.
The descriptive text (anchor text) used to link to other sites is another ingredient
of the PageRank algorithm. Search engines associate a website with the anchor
text of incoming links. The founders of Google defined PageRank as the chance
that a random surfer will find a particular website. The chances of finding
the website are influenced by what other sites say about a particular site’s
content. Therefore, the text a site uses to describe another site (anchor text)
influences the outcome of a particular search. Recently, Google has placed increased
emphasis on the importance of links from relevant websites that use varied anchor
text.
Google is constantly updating their methodology, their primary concern being
the number of naturally occurring links. This is a crucial concept to consider
when determining which text links to purchase.