Press "Enter" to skip to content

Year: 2006

How Strong Are Your Web Pages?

Recently the kind folks over at SEOmoz developed a slick new tool which allows you to calculate what they refer to as your “Page Strength”.

page_strength.gif

According to the creators of the Page Strength Tool (Matt Inman and Rand Fishman):

“SEOmoz’s Page Strength tool is intended to serve as an alternative to Google’s PageRank score in the toolbar, offering insight into how valuable, important and popular a site or page is as compared to others on the web…The tool is designed to satisfy the curiosity of webmasters, surfers and web marketing professionals seeking a better metric to quickly assess a site/page’s relative importance and visibility.”

What will the tool tell you?

  • The relative importance and visibility of a webpage
  • The potential strength and ability of a page to rank in the search engines
  • Data on popularity, links, and mentions of the page across the web

How does it work?

Simply enter your URL and let the tool do the rest. You will receive a calculation of your overall page strength along with a report card outlining how well you are doing in each of the areas that contribute to the score, including:

  • Number of links pointing to the full URL
  • Number of links pointing to the domain
  • Position at Google for the first four words of the title tag on the target URL
  • Age of the Domain
  • Number of links from domains with .edu TLDs
  • Number of links from domains with .gov TLDs
  • Alexa Rank and Google PageRank of full URL and Domain
  • Domain name visibility
  • Internal link percentage
  • Number of search results for a URL search at del.icio.us
  • Number of Listings in DMOZ (ODP)
  • Number of links found in Wikipedia

page_strength_score.gif

After trying it out – I think this tool is great! It supplies you with a nice snapshot of your SEO efforts and helps you identify the areas that need improvement. You can also use the tool to strengthen your competitive analysis (apply it to your competitor’s sites to see how you measure up) and to rate potential link partners within your industry.

Comments closed

HBC Shares Key Business Intelligence Learnings

The “Hudson’s Bay Company”:http://www.hbc.com/ (HBC) is in the process of deploying a common business intelligence (BI) sales reporting system across its major retail The Bay department stores, “Zellers”:http://www.zellers.com/ discount stores and “Home Outfitters”:http://www.homeoutfitters.com/. In this article on ITbusiness.ca, they openly share their implementation difficulties for this large integrated project, which involves over 5,500 end-users.
Kudos to HBC for sharing. I suggest you “read the full article”:http://www.itbusiness.ca/it/client/en/home/News.asp?id=40609, but here are my three major takeaways.
The first takeaway is that the days of defining functional requirements and handing these over the wall to the Information Technology (IT) department are gone. For complex, integrated projects, business people need to bring IT into the loop early in discussion so that the tradeoffs between business and IT requirements are worked together, not as salvos fired back and forth about what business can and can’t have. A major cultural change on both parts, this is easier said than done.

Comments closed