Just Write Relevant, Compelling Articles About Real Estate and/or Mortgage and You Won’t Have to Worry About Page Rank and SEO

Hat tip to Todd at Blog Fiesta for pointing out that Google reshuffled the Page Rank deck. This post started as a comment and question for Todd, then it got to be really long, then I decided to make it a post.

For anyone who finds themselves struggling to generate new content (bloggers block), this is a great way to push through the plateau–taking a comment into a new post.

My comment/question:

Hey Todd…

Question:

Can you explain what Page Rank means in tangible terms? As in, what are the demonstrated differences and/or advantages between a site that is a PR4 and one thats a PR5 (and 6 or 7 for that matter).

In your experience, are proper SEO tactics (whatever they are) and Page Rank closely affiliated?

Then I got to thinking (although I’d still like to hear Todd’s answer)…It doesn’t seem that PR has much to do w/ SEO.

I don’t follow status-quo SEOnomics advice but my site is a PR5, has been for the past few Google PR shuffles. A PR5 supposedly requires some hard core, intense SEO-Fu to achieve…except I don’t practice SEO-Fu. The one time I did, I got the beat down.

Wrote a post titled ‘The Best Mortgage Blog‘ in September 2007. 72 hours later I searched Google and Yahoo! for ‘The Best Mortgage Blog’ and *bang* #1 on page 1 of the organic results on all three SERP’s. This post resided in top position for this term for quite sometime (I stopped looking in December).

Today, if you type in The Best Mortgage Blog on Google, you cannot find the post, even if you extend the Search to ‘The Best Mortgage Blog xbroker’. Can’t find it via their Blog Search page either (the post is still #1 on Yahoo). So it appears The Google hath punished me. How they flesh this out is beyond me.

I don’t know how they do it, but I believe that Google pays very close attention to how you ‘build your blog’. If you try to implement crafty SEO tactics based on what pundits say will increase your PR, you’re more likely to be penalized (or marginalized) than rewarded. I’m not talking about black hat stuff (sure way to get penalized and even banned from the SERP’s), but rather any strategy thats designed to try and manipulate Google’s mysterious omnipotent algorithmic brain.

From Googles site regarding Page Rank:

Google combines PageRank with sophisticated text-matching techniques to find pages that are both important and relevant to your search. Google goes far beyond the number of times a term appears on a page and examines dozens of aspects of the page’s content (and the content of the pages linking to it) to determine if it’s a good match for your query.

Google’s complex automated methods make human tampering with our search results extremely difficult.

In other words, don’t even try to figure this out.

My lone SEO practice resides in a plug-in for WordPress: The All-In-One SEO pack, which prods me for keywords, a short description and a title. Thats it. The only time I’m even remotely ‘SEO conscious’ is when choosing a title, trying to pen the verbiage as to how a human may search for the content within a particular post, which may be a back asswards technique for all I know.

Other ‘SEO sins’ committed here, deemed counter intuitive to achieving a higher PR:

  • A big blogroll and too many links on my home page (so they claim…)
  • I submit some duplicate content to ActiveRain (because I enjoy the feedback from inter-industry professionals) and many Splogs scrape my content, increasing the apparent damaging duplicity.

Just write relevant, compelling articles about real estate and/or mortgage and you won’t have to worry about Page Rank and SEO

So that’s my $.02… improving Page Rank and ‘SEO Strategies’ are often disjointed and other times damaging to one another. But I’m still interested in what anyone else (especially an SEO-Fu artist or Page Rank guru) has to say, cause I’m no expert…

MicroBlogging

I’m one to write diatribes.  I have this internal claw that directs me to carefully articulate my topics by preemptively covering all angles (and potential rebuttals) as a reader takes the time to digest my left (or right) of center opinions.

This can get, mmmm, tedious at times.  I don’t like tedious but I’ve been of the mindset that if someone is going to take the time to read my stuff, I should put out my best…thus the resulting diatribe-itus.

Two ‘things’…one is a service, the other is a person…have led me to see and blog otherwise.

Twitter is a service in and of itself that consists of a user entering 4-5 line max ‘thoughts’ or ‘What I’m doing’ blurbs that may not seem significant in singular, but when read across a time period, can really give you insight into how and/or who a person is.  Initially, I thought Twitter was lame, now I find myself ‘Twittering’ on a few platforms.

The person is Dustin Luther and his site 4Realz.net.  Dustin needs no introduction to those familiar with the re.net (a term coined by Greg Swann, another influencer in this) space, but in case you haven’t heard of or read about him (welcome out from under the rock) he is a pioneer in and for the social networking aspects of real estate.  I thoroughly enjoy 4Realz (and Dustin) because it (he) practices what I call Microblogging, a few lines or paragraphs tipping hat to whats interesting to him, which I find interesting.  I read 4Realz.net every day because I know it will take me <30 seconds and lead me somewhere interesting, either in my own head or else ware in the Web.

Both ‘things’ have influenced me to the point of practicing MicroBlogging…its a refreshing alternative to the diatribe :)   I encourage other bloggers to practice Microblogging as well because it allows your audience to get to know you quicker.  Real estate and mortgage transactions will always have a personal relationship factor to them, regardless of technology and resulting levels of disintermediation.  Although I’ve only met Dustin 3 maybe 4 times, and we’ve only exchanged cursory  level handshakes and well-wishy conversations, I feel like I know Dustin far better than our personal interactions would typically dictate.

All real estate and mortgage professionals could benefit from the simple dynamic Microblogging creates…a quick interesting conversation about relevant topics.

Dan Green Productions Presents, I am a Blogger…

Dan Green Productions Presents:

I am a Blogger…

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Dan hands me (everyone) a bunch of flash cards and says ‘Look in to the camera, read the card and fill in the blanks with whatever you feel.’So, trying to be true to ‘my blog’ I spit out words like ‘disruptive’ and ‘piss people off’…Man I crack myself up.Blogging is also:

  • Therapeutic
  • Fun
  • Addictive
  • Narcissistic
  • Good for Business
  • Dedication
  • Real

Keep it up Dan, Spielberg ain’t got nothin on you…BTW, Whats up with the Wellcome Matt guys outfits? I missed them at the Expo…Looks like they’re Ghostbusters 2.0.

The Cast:

  • David Gibbons of Zillow.com
  • Michael Price of MLPodcast
  • Damon Pace of Incredible Agent
  • Loren Nason of The Future of Real Estate Technology
  • Linda Davis of Eastern CT Real Estate Blog
  • Jessica Swesey of Inman
  • Joel Burslem of The Future of Real Estate Marketing
  • Christian and Phil of WellcomeMat.com
  • Jeff Corbett of The XBroker
  • Brian Boero of 1000 Watt Consulting
  • Scott Foreno of Pro Real Estate City
  • Jay Thompson of The Phoenix Real Estate Guy
  • Dustin Luther of Rain City Guide and Move.com
  • Kristal Kraft of Denver Dwellings
  • Dru Bloomfield of At Home In Scottsdale
  • Dan Green of The Mortgage Reports