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Reviewed Search Engine Optimization Articles By Members
Rising Above The SEO Reputation
By Kalena Jordan (kalena@high-search-engine-ranking.com) 29th August 2002
How many times have you seen an article referring to
SEO (search engine optimization) as a
"Black Art" or "underhanded", "manipulative", "sleazy", "deceptive", "sneaky"
etc. I could go on and on but you get my drift. The thing is - our industry has
a pitiful reputation which is being reinforced on a daily basis by the media and
word of mouth.
This realization hit me between the eyes recently when I
read a comment in a search engine forum from an SEO who claimed he used his
ethical SEO methods as a Unique Selling Point. Look what we've been reduced to -
differentiating ourselves from the masses because we DON'T break the rules. What
other industry could boast such a thing? Apart from the used car industry, I
can't really think of any.
So where did this nasty reputation come from
and why has it been allowed to propagate? Well, it's mainly care of the hundreds
of cowboys out there who decide one day they are online marketing experts,
announce themselves as SEO's and set up a backyard biz, deciding (naively) that
the fastest way to achieve high rankings is to break the rules, "crack" the
search engine algorithms and undermine the search indexes by generating pages
and pages of search engine spam. They do this by creating doorway pages designed
for search engine spiders rather than humans, complete with hidden text, hidden
links, cloaking and lots of other "tricks" they come across as they surf the
Internet.
Problem is these self-proclaimed experts don't bother to do
their research and learn that such spamming techniques have long been
ineffective. Nearly all the search engines these days have sophisticated methods
of detecting and removing spam within days of receiving submissions. Penalties
for spamming the search engines differ from engine to engine, but can range from
being "red flagged" and put on a watch list, to being hit with a ranking
penalty, to having your site permanently banned from their index (in severe
cases). The type of scumbag SEO's that would play Russian Roulette with their
client's web sites in this fashion are well-deserving of scorn. It can take
months for search engines to lift such penalties, if they decide to at
all.
While ineffective, such search engine spamming techniques have
defined the reputation of the search engine optimization industry to date. In
turn, this reputation is eroding business for so-called "ethical" SEO's - a term
I use loosely to describe SEO's that don't try to undermine the search engine
indexes when optimizing web sites. Actually, I'm not really comfortable with the
term "ethics" to describe SEO. Until the industry establishes and accepts a
standardized Code of Practise, we are just measuring others by our own personal
standards and a set of arbitrary rules. But the SEO's I'm talking about strive
to keep search results as relevant as possible by revising the visible site
content and following the guidelines set down by the search engines in the
optimization process. Some SEO's call this "White Magic SEO" - a tongue in cheek
response to the "Black Magic" jibes I guess.
Not surprisingly, search
engines have been reduced to lumping all SEO's into the "untrustworthy" basket.
On their Webmaster Do's and Don'ts page (http://www.google.com/webmasters/dos.html),
Google state: "Be very careful about allowing an individual consultant or
company to 'optimize' your web site. Chances are they will engage in some of our
"Don'ts" and end up hurting your site". Chances are? Sounds a bit presumptuous
if you ask me.
Likewise, at a recent search engine conference, a
representative from AltaVista declared that "all SEO's could be described using
four letter words". The typical Internet user can only come to the conclusion
that, according to some very reliable sources, SEO's are not to be trusted - now
how fair is that?
So the main problem is - how do we address this
reputation issue? Do we establish and agree on a standard Code of Practice as in
development on sites such as the World Association of Internet Marketers (http://www.waim.org/ethics.html), SEO
Consultants (http://www.seoconsultants.com/seo-code-of-ethics.htm)
and SEO Pros (http://www.seopros.org/members/practices.htm)?
Do we race around locating and reporting search engine spam in the hope of
improving our reputation in the eyes of the search engines? Or do we simply
follow our own set of standards and hope potential clients can come to their own
untainted conclusions? Personally I'm looking forward to the day when I no
longer detect immediate suspicion when I tell people I optimize web sites for a
living.
Email Kalena Jordan with feedback on this article.
SeoPros recommends the authors
website for more tips and articles.
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