Google PR: Does it really matter?

Been receiving emails in the last 24 hours about the recent and radical changes in Google PageRank. The growing trend is downhill, especially for popular and highly trusted sites. Despite all these, the question remains — does it really matter?

Let me answer several of the more important questions thrown at me.

Does a PageRank drop really matter?

If you’re not selling links for PR juice, why should it matter? So, if you don’t sell ads on your site or blog, the PR is just for decorative purposes. Five years ago, it might represent some sort of authority but that perception has been devalued or totally erased now. Will people stop reading your blog? Will feed readers un-subscribe? Will blogs not link to you anymore?

If you are selling links on your site, a PR drop will matter — financially, that is. Link ad brokers have always used the PR as a huge factor to put a value for a raw link on your site. So, if you’re getting $60 a pop at TLA before, a -2 change in PR could slash that amount to at least third.

Jayvee proposes that blog networks should not rely on AdSense or Text Link Ads for their revenue stream. This is true — but not on blog networks alone but for everyone. I believe it’s even more recommended for independent bloggers as they do not have the same massive clout, sales force or cumulative traffic as a blog network.

In fact, I think this development might even kill the viability of narrow verticals with small traffic within a blog network. Imagine a blog network paying a blogger $250 a month for a blog that only generates 20,000 pageviews. The network might just earn a total $100 when computing a $5 CPM from direct ads. Without additional fixed revenue from link ads (which is independent of site traffic), the network stands to lose $150 a month from the setup. Multiple that with dozens of really very narrow niches that would not be profitable if they’d just go direct ads on a CPM basis.

How will this affect your revenue or business?

It depends. How much of your overall revenue stream comes from selling link ads? Say you have 3 income sources for your blog — AdSense, Direct and TLA. All three contribute equal amounts of monthly income. You got hit by a -2 PR drop. Your link ad prices have been devalued by 66%. If all the rest remained the same, you still have 88.7% of your original income intact. That percentage will shift either way depending on how much you rely on link ads.

The key is always spread your income sources as wide as you can. In my case, this development might set me back between 10 – 15% of monthly revenue projections.

Likewise, it also pays to have your ad deals put on a longer time period. Most of the ads I have here have been paid for the next 6 to 12 months. By the time they’ll expire, the blog would have undergone at least 2 more PR updates. Who knows, it might just improve later?

Does a low PR mean a lower traffic?

This is one misconception a lot of bloggers have. And I mean a lot.

If there’s one valuable lesson this has taught many of us, it’s the realization that high PR does not mean high traffic. So, even at a much lower PageRank, referral traffic from Google still remains the same.

The blog still ranks well for the usual keywords. There’s not been any drastic shuffling in the SERPs. I’d rather lose PR than lose my prized position in the SERPs.

Is this a warning shot from Google?

It sure does look like it. Nobody would believe in the FUD before. Now, the FUD is real. Andrews shares some relevant stats from Ratified — 58 down, 14 up, and 407 steady.

Aaron Wall says maybe it’s time for a better rank system and calls on Yahoo’s WebRank or an Ask CommunityRank. Loren Baker adds that PageRank is no longer a Marketing Metrics.

People from TLA have emailed publishers that they will not change current pricing despite the recent changes and have actually expressed intentions of removing PR for link valuations.

Will bloggers get scared of selling links or doing paid reviews now?

Most likely. The ones that have not been able to sell links (but are already advertising to do so) will be the first one. My question though is this — so why are you still interested in a higher PageRank when you’re not gonna sell links for PR anyway or if we’ve already established that PR does not correlate to higher traffic?

One thing’s for sure, link brokers like TLA or PPP will mostly feel the burn. It’s Google’s way of trumping businesses competing against their AdWords/AdSense tandem.

Footnotes:
CPM – cost per thousand (ad impressions)
SERPs – seach engine result pages
FUD – fear, uncertainty, doubt

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 998 other subscribers
Avatar for Abe Olandres

Abe is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of YugaTech with over 20 years of experience in the technology industry. He is one of the pioneers of blogging in the country and considered by many as the Father of Tech Blogging in the Philippines. He is also a technology consultant, a tech columnist with several national publications, resource speaker and mentor/advisor to several start-up companies.

36 Responses

  1. Avatar for AFCnews AFCnews says:

    I was thrilled with the last Gunners match the other week, id love it if we can get the points up and stay first in the premier league, Come on you gunners!

  2. Avatar for Location Ile Rousse Location Ile Rousse says:

    dur de tout comprendre

  3. Avatar for Arsene Arsene says:

    Site de telechargements et services 100% gratuits.

  4. Avatar for The Olympic Blogger The Olympic Blogger says:

    BTW I rank higher (41) in Ratified than the photography blog (218) so I guess that really makes me the biggest winner in ratified. Yahoo! :D este Google pala… hehe

  5. Avatar for The Olympic Blogger The Olympic Blogger says:

    Yehey! I’m the biggest winner in Ratified!!! Shooting my PR up from PR N/A to PR4 for http://olympicblogger.blogspot.com! Well… there’s this other blog about photography but we both did the same 0-4. I’d say it was a great achievement in my case because I just started that blog 8-3-2007! :D

    I have another blog that went from PR N/A to PR4! http://callcenterveteran.blogspot.com

    That blog I started 6-26-2007!

    Salamat Google!

  6. Avatar for Mike Lopez Mike Lopez says:

    I also suffered a PR drop more than 2 months ago and traced (possibly) the cause to incoming links in the form of spam URLs resulting to 404s on my site. In a matter of days, Google reported 3000+ 404 errors on my site so I decided to take action on it. Now my PR is back up to PR4 – still one notch less from the original PR5. Full details of what I did can be found at http://seo.mikelopez.info/2007/10/27/pr-update-mikelopezinfo-goes-back-up-to-pr4/

  7. Avatar for Chino Yray Chino Yray says:

    Does low PR mean low traffic? Of course!

    I agree with this. Especially for blogs that depends on the search engine to get some traffic. My blog has always been the Top 1 for the “earn free lindens” in Second Life and “free lindens” of the Virtual World.

    50% of my traffic is from Google and I’m loving the PR4 right now. Because of that ranking, my blog will surely stay there on the top for such keywords.

  8. Avatar for iRonnie iRonnie says:

    with a PR of zero, im earning more in selling links compared to adsense. now why would i care with my PR rank? it just serve as a moral boost.

  9. Avatar for autocad autocad says:

    I agree with Abe regarding the page rank does not really affect the SERP. Just this January 2007, my site went from PR4 to PR3. All or most of the sites with the same theme loose a bit of their PR like mine. This really affected me but actually the traffic remained almost the same.

    Then after a few months the traffic increased from Google three times as before but the PR3 remains the same. Before, Yahoo makes approximately 85% of my traffic, Google was approx. 10%. But now Google makes almost 40% at maximum.

  10. Avatar for BrianB BrianB says:

    Update: the PMPToday PR just jumped to five or the same level as engadget. Yesterday it was 2.

Leave a Reply
JOIN OUR TELEGRAM DISCUSSION

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *