Do outbound leaks siphon off PageRank?
by ZetaGecko | 2 Comments | SEO
In response to my article on using RSS for SEO, the question has arisen of whether outbound links from a web page really reduce its PageRank. The answer? Yes and no.
Without going into too much detail, Google doesn't take PageRank away from one page and give it to another, so the answer is no. But it does allocate a page's PageRank voting power between all of the pages to which it links. So if your web pages link to each other, and not to external pages, then all of your pages' voting power goes into increasing the PageRank of your own pages, rather than some of it going to increasing someone else's PageRank. So the answer is also yes.
If you do a Google search and check the PageRank of the pages that come up in the results, you'll quickly see that pages can appear higher in the results than pages with higher PageRank. Why? Because Google considers them to be more relevant to the search query. (Freshness may also factor in.) It has been suggested that Google may rate a page's relevance to a topic higher if it links to pages they consider authoritative on that topic. If this is true, it may very well be worth letting a little PageRank leak off to such sites in return for the increased relevance.
Returning to the topic of using RSS for SEO, the pages to which most RSS feeds link seem unlikely to be authoritative enough to make the tradeoff worthwhile.
December 31st, 2010 at 12:43 pm
I'm not sure if I understand this article.
"...using RSS for SEO, the pages to which most RSS feeds link seem unlikely to be authoritative enough to make the tradeoff worthwhile."
What trade-off? you are saying you with the outgoing link aren't really 'giving' away any of your page rank, you might just be adding a bit more to them so what's the big deal? you're using their content anyway and you are not losing any page rank. Unless you are saying that as a result you are making the other sites 'stronger' which could 'potentially' effect your position on search results?
December 31st, 2010 at 3:07 pm
Let's use some made-up numbers to illustrate. Let's say you have a page that has 3 PageRank "votes". If that page links to 2 of your pages, they'll each get 1.5 votes. If it also links to an external page, each of your pages will get 1 vote.
The page doing the linking isn't having PageRank "sucked" out of it, but the other pages you link to just aren't getting as much as they would have. That's what you're giving up.