Hello!
First of all, the Facebook page and a blog is a start, but perhaps not a great one. Where've you hosted the blog? If you've hosted it on a separate blog site like Blogspot, you're already wasting your time. The idea of starting a blog is to post interesting content that people will want to link to, these links will increase the pagerank of your blog, not necessarily the pagerank of your main site. So, you want to link to your site from your blog as often as possible to pass on the pagerank. Ideally, you want the blog at yourdomain.com/blog, so Google is at least acknowledging the existence of yourdomain.com. If you've done that already, good stuff.
Getting people to link to your site is indeed difficult and there are a lot of ways you can go about doing it. I'd start by putting a link to your site everywhere you possibly can. In your forum signatures, in profile pages on social networking sites, dogging sites, whatever you use. I'd also comment on other blogs in your particular field with something interesting to add to the general discussion, with a link back to your own site. This is all good whitehat stuff and completely above board.
If you've got money to spend, you can pay people for links, but if Google spots it, they'll discount the links and you'll be back to square one. There are a zillion ways to make backlinks, you just have to get creative. As for the Facebook page, it might be good for a bit of brand awareness amongst the Facebook folk, but the likelihood of it improving your pagerank is very minimal because Facebook is a closed shop. Google can't spider it all because you need an account to see anything. The only Facebook pages Google indexes are the 'public profile' bits. Still, I wouldn't say 'stop wasting your time on Facebook', it's useful in a different way.
Try setting up a Twitter account and link to any blog posts from there. Set up a Digg account and Digg them. Set up accounts on the various Digg clones, and other things like Delicious.
Pagerank will come in time. It's based on various things such as the quality and variety of sites linking to you, the number of links and the age of the page.
HOWEVER, all of this is academic because pagerank really isn't very important. It was up until a few years ago, but recently low pagerank sites are ranking highly in the Google results regardless. And this is what you want. You want to be ranking highly for search terms in your field. So, go back to the start of this post and follow it all again, forgetting about pagerank. It's still applicable, but for search engine rankings rather than the pointless pagerank number. Also, it helps if the links you're posting to your site have a relevant anchor text. If you're selling cheap cars, you want the anchor text to say 'cheap cars', or variations on this. So, when someone searches Google for 'cheap cars', your page comes out on top, you get the traffic, you make the money.
Basically, pagerank is bollocks. There are a lot of sites out there that will tell you it's important. I can tell you from experience working in this field, that those people are either lying and deliberately misinforming, or way behind the rest of the field in SEO. There are a lot of so-called 'SEO' companies out there taking advantage of people who don't know much about it, and they're making a hell of a lot of money from it using old techniques, out of date information and very basic stuff (like inserting a keyword into some text a few times - on-page SEO - and not even building backlinks). These people are cunts.
edit: And fscked.co.uk is a pagerank 0. 0 is actually a pagerank, though, so it's not unlisted. N/A would mean it is unlisted.
If you have any specific questions, feel free to ask!
|