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"Marketing is among
the engines that drive the Web"
Amazing Media Misconceptions
BY
MIKE BANKS VALENTINE
In a New
York Times syndicated article titled 'Marketing
is among the engines that drive the Web',
reporter Bill Husted of the Atlanta Constitution
Journal made the following statements.
"As the Web has become more important,
a new type of marketing company has arisen.
These companies make a living teaching web
sites how manipulate search engines."
"The idea is a simple one "to
fool the search engine and get higher on the
list," said Naveen Donthu, a marketing
professor at Georgia State University."
As founder of one of those "new type
of marketing compan(ies)", I'd like to
tell you that those foolish few who do "make
a living teaching web sites how manipulate
search engines" ... are unethical.
It is simply not advisable for those who want
to stay in business. Those who use unethical
techniques to "manipulate" the search
engines will very quickly be *banned* from
the search engines. Their clients, both past
and present, could go down with them and no
substantive SEO firm will use unethical techniques
to risk the long term success of their company.
In short, the industry is maturing and a standard
of ethics has been established.
http://www.seopros.org/members/practices.htm
http://www.bruceclay.com/web_ethics.htm
See http://www.google.com/webmasters/seo.html
where Google states plainly, "Ask your
SEO firm if it reports every spam abuse that
it finds to Google using our spam complaint
form at http://www.google.com/contact/spamreport.html.
Ethical SEO firms report deceptive sites that
violate Google's spam guidelines."
Those of us doing ethical SEO do report unethical
firms and sites and most search engines provide
reporting emails.
The following email addresses are obscured
to spambot harvesters to human readable form
only.
Google: spamreport (AT) google (DOT) com
AltaVista: spam-support (AT) altavista (DOT)
com
Fast: spam (AT) fastsearch (DOT) com
Teoma: help (AT) teoma.com
Inktomi: spambuster (AT) inktomi (DOT) com
Most SEO firms work to bring ethics to the
industry. It benefits businesses, SEO's and
the search engines when our work honestly
structures web sites in a way that has become
known as "search engine friendly".
Without getting into tedious details (tedious
for most, I find it fascinating ;-) we simply
emphasize TEXT and content, as well as web
site structure, to help the search engine
spiders understand what those sites
are about. The most successful sites are full
of good information and have lots of other
related sites linking to them which also increases
their ranking in the search results.
Husted also said,
"Some sites abuse the system, including
phrases in the meta tags for services they
do not offer or for information they do not
have." and "Ordinary users cant
see these words. Theyre hidden in the
computer code used to create the Web pages."
These statements are simply not true. If a
site has lots of good content about beekeeping,
it doesn't matter what is "hidden
in the computer code". As a matter
of fact, most search engines no longer pay
attention to most of those "meta tags
buried on each site" because
abuse of those tags by unethical webmasters
very quickly made meta tags meaningless. The
search engines figured out that meta tags
were being abused and decreased their importance
in the search algorithms.
Husted's story may have been correct 5 years
ago, but meta tags are mostly ignored by the
top search engines now and most engines have
ignored them for years. The abuse (called
keyword stuffing) was practiced by unethical
webmasters years ago, not by Search Engine
Optimization (SEO) firms today.
Beekeepers just want to sell honey. If they
hire an SEO firm to help their site rank well
in the search engines, they are likely to
sell more honey. There is no manipulation
in that. If you want to read non-commercial
information about beekeeping so as to avoid
those sites selling things, simply look at
the domain extension and go to the non-profit
.edu and .org sites for your research and
stay away from .com's.
Unfortunately, you'll miss some good information
using that approach because ethical SEO firms
labor to add relevant articles to our clients'
commercial sites that lack them. Why? Because
adding relevant content improves search engine
ranking.
I'd also like to take the opportunity to point
out a couple of things Husted is apparently
not aware of.
He said, ". . . Yahoo (or in almost any
other search engine)" Yahoo is a directory,
not a search engine. Husted continues . .
. "Computer programs, not humans, do
the majority of the work when it comes to
creating search engine rankings."
While this is TRUE at crawler-based search
engines like Google, it is FALSE when referring
to Yahoo and Open Directory Project Directory
results. Directories determine where a site
belongs in their index by using a HUMAN reviewer.
You'll note that on the results page, there
are tabs across the top of the page saying,
from left to right, " Web - Directory
- News - Yellow Pages - Images."
If you then click on the "Directory"
tab, you are now seeing results from the Yahoo
Directory and ONLY from Yahoo Directory. Those
"Directory" results may not show
up in Google or any other search engine at
all, but ONLY at Yahoo, where they paid to
be listed.
"For starters, almost all commercial
sites pay the search engine folks just to
get listed. At Yahoo, for instance, commercial
sites pay $299 a year."
Not true. Once again, Yahoo is a directory.
Google and AllTheWeb.com, (two of the largest
and most trusted crawler-based engines) have
free submissions and their computers have
"spiders" that will crawl the web
and find most information without even submitting
those sites.
Each of the major search engines have partnerships
with most other large portals to provide search
results to them. So those beekeepers can get
listed in Yahoo search results simply by being
listed in Google while never paying anyone
a dime to be listed.
Further the largest of directories online
is the Open Directory Project. Their directory
is powered by HUMAN reviewers and they provide
search results to hundreds of other web sites
and portals with no charge either to the included
sites or to the hundreds of sites that use
their index! You can see that for yourself
at the following URL:
http://dmoz.org/help/geninfo.html
"The ODP powers core directory services
for some the most popular portals and search
engines on the Web, including AOL Search,
Netscape Search, Google, Lycos, DirectHit,
and HotBot, and hundreds of others. The ODP
is 100% free. There is no cost to submit a
site or to use our data."
There are programs at search engines
called "paid inclusion" where site
owners can pay to be INCLUDED in those search
engines, but it has absolutely NO effect on
their RANKING. It simply speeds up the six
to eight week process of getting the engines
to "crawl" the site with their "spiders".
This gets a site included in the index in
as little as a week, but they may still show
up near the bottom of thousands of results
and still may never be seen when you search
for the topic of that site using keywords
at that search engines they have paid to be
"included" in.
The final type of paid search positioning
is done via what are called "pay-per-click"
engines where site owners can bid (starting
at about a dime per search phrase) on search
phrases likely to bring visitors to their
web site when searches are done at search
engines that partner with those pay-per-click
services.
The top pay-per-click sites, such as Overture.com
have strict editorial guidelines that REQUIRE
relevant content at the URL assigned to the
search phrase of the bidding site owner. If
the site owner bids more than all other bidders
for a particular search phrase AND they have
passed those editorial guidelines, their results
will appear as one of those "sponsor
matches" you mentioned at major portals,
including Yahoo. No fooling anyone here either.
If sites do what is called "keyword phrase
stuffing" by "including phrases
in the meta tags for services they do not
offer or for information they do not have."
They are extremely likely to be either scam
sites seeking to fleece the unsuspecting surfer
in some identity theft scam or they intend
to attract unknowing surfers to unsavory sites
selling dubious physical enhancement pills,
fountain of youth powders or dieting liquids.
You needn't worry that they will use the term
"Beekeeping" to get you to those
scam sites, so you can feel comfortable that
your searches will still turn up sites about
Beekeeping and not some site you hadn't intended
to find. Keep your searches focused on beekeeping
and be concise, you'll get great search engine
results.
Search Engine Optimization and Marketing firms
are working to make your search results more
relevant. If we were to be hired by non-profit
sites you seem to prefer, then we would happily
help their site rank well for non-profit purposes.
But, truth be known, most non-profit sites
don't need help since those sites are usually
full of great relevant text, have lots of
links from other highly relevant, text based
sites that are likely to be well ranked, which
in turn helps to increase link popularity,
and therefore improves the ranking of that
original site.
Here's an example of exactly that scenario
non-profit sites outrank commercial ones.
If you go to Google and search the phrase
"Los Angeles Attorney", you'll find
that the number one position is held by http://da.co.la.ca.us
the LA District Attorney's Office web site.
Number 2 position is held by the Los Angeles
City Attorney's Office. This is not unusual
for any search term that could apply to a
government web site, as they often properly
structure their pages, avoid using stupid
techniques like keyword stuffing and provide
tons of useful TEXT based content.
This is also due to the link popularity of
the LA DA site with 954 links pointing to
them, followed by proper page architecture
of using Los Angeles Attorney in the most
important places on the pages. Then finally,
many pages of useful, text-filled content
that is relevant to the search phrase.
No need to fear getting PAID results that
are not labeled as 'Sponsor' and no need to
worry that you are going to find sites in
your searches that don't apply to beekeeping
if that is what you searched for, no matter
what is "hidden in the computer code."
As you can see, this information is complex
and changes often as search engines merge,
policies change and partnerships with portals
change. This is the reason business web sites
contract with SEO firms to gain and maintain
top search rankings for those companies who
don't have employees in-house with this specialized
knowledge and the ability to devote time and
resources to studying the continually evolving
variables.
----------------------------------------------------------------
Mike Banks Valentine, CEO
http://SEOptimism.com
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