Alexa.com
How many people are familiar with Alexa.com 'The Web Information Company'? Even more interesting is the fact that it is an Amazon.com company.
Alexa gathers web traffic stats through users who have installed it's proprietary Alexa Tool Bar. A site's rank or score is measured on a scale from around 4 million as the lowest, to 1 as the highest. That's right, the lower the score, the better. There is a graph or chart that shows traffic only for those sites who have reached 100,000 or better.
A not-so-innocent and difficult manipulation of both Page Rank and Alexa is to visit your targeted site from various web enabled devices (computers, phones, etc.), with unique IP addresses.
I should explain by saying that both PR and Alexa register a hit or vote from a particular IP address only about once a day. So you cannot sit at the same
computer (which generally keeps the same IP address for a day or so) and just hit refresh all day long and expect to raise your scores.
I have, in the past, made mad dashes to public library computers, computer stores with display computers that are on the internet, friend's houses who are on the web, business customers of mine and used web enabled phones, etc. just to pull up my site and get another unique hit. Yes I was obsessed but I did manage to get one site to the 100,000 mark on Alexa. It will forever show in Alex's archived stats that I made this "achievement".
I also raised my Google Page Rank up to a 6 for a couple of sites. It was a good learning experience but I do not recommend trying it yourself.
Google PR
Google has a proprietary method of ranking all websites. Supposedly if you have a high enough rank you can use your clout to do stuff like sell advertising space on your site. I say it doesn't hurt to have this.
Your Google rank is partly determined by who links TO you, not who you link to. Also, I have seen higher page ranks on my websites that mention Google or have a Google search box.
You can manipulate Google's search feature to associate certain keywords with each other. Even keywords that do not seem to relate at all with the name or content of the website.
Example - If enough people enter keywords like "compuwise" and "best author" in the same Google search, then theoretically you could eventually create an association that makes a search for "best author" pull up pages about "compuwise". Type in either word and get to the same page! This is a fairly innocent trick and for the most part, it is also very difficult to accomplish.
I am currently testing a theory where I typed in keywords that I know would pull up my AC page and then copied Google's URL that contains those keywords. If I put that link in signatures and what not instead of the direct link to my AC page then maybe to a small degree my page will be associated with Google since technically Google linked me to my page. This should increase my page rank and maybe my raise my placement on other search engines. Help test the theory and then do it for your own site. CLICK BELOW! :)
In the end it is much more satisfying and beneficial to have genuinely earned scores from each of these sites.
Published by Compuwise
Currently pursuing a Bachelors of Science in Information Technology at Kaplan University online. View profile
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17 Comments
Post a CommentGreat information, We used to rank in the top 100,000 in Alexa, then recently it dropped into the millions. The Google info is great, thanks. Would like to know how your page rank is affected by your experiment.
These are things I am trying to learn..You would think that someone that can master alternative mathmatical bases should be able to digest the computer information.
saving this one to refer to later-havent' ck'd Alexa in awhile-even though it's somewhat skewed. reading your article later since you probably know of what you're talking. have a great day
This was a great article. You have a firm grasp on this type of info. This helps because we have to be concerned about SEO when writing articles. I still have lots to learn and this certainly helps. Thanks.
interesting article. It's nice to have such a popular topic explained like this. Thanks
Alot of info, good article
I was not aware of this. Thank you for the information.
I've been playing with Alexia for a while now. I still haven't quite figured it out. It's nice to see the stats though.
Good luck with your theory... let me know how that works out. Thanks for the info!
Intriguing as I'm still trying to up my learning curve about page rank and SEO info and other related areas about web traffic.