Is Your Site Under Google Penalty?

One of the most important aspects of taking care of a site’s search ‘appropriateness’ is knowing what can get you penalized by Google (or any other search engine for that matter).  Knowing how to assess the situation correctly so that you can tell if you have just been served a penalty can help you significantly to get the site back at the top for your search terms. Unfortunately, it’s a sure thing that Google is not going to publish the criteria it uses for deciding who gets penalized. So we have to make an educated guess. In the SEO community, our opinions come from spending a lot of time–in some cases years–observing what does, and doesn’t get good results. As with just about any other aspect of SEO, most of what I’m about to say here will be met with cyber-cries of ‘but I disagree,’ or ‘I can prove otherwise,’ pr even expletives! That’s the nature of what we do–there’s always a lot of room for disagreement. If you have been following SEO best-practices closely for some time, it’s highly unlikely that you’ll fall foul of the search engines to the degree that you get penalized. But sometimes as SEO warriors, we inherit a bad situation that someone else has created, and it’s not always obvious at first glance. Google Sandbox or

When SEO Is Not Really SEO

Okay so this article isn’t an SEO tutorial.  It’s not a rant against the fine people at Google Labs.  It’s not even a rant so much as a question I pose to you, Search Engine Journal’s readers. Okay – maybe I’ll rant just a little.  because that’s part of my voice.  Oh fine.  Enough of you know me by now that this is really going to be a full blown rant.  And a question.  What can I say?  The topic for this article didn’t just pop into my head one day.  It’s been boiling and roiling and fuming and fermenting for a long time. So what topic could possibly get me so completely ripped apart that I’d want to scream at the top of my lungs? How about…. Wait for it….     Pretend SEO If you think you know what I’m talking about, read on.  You may be surprised. Pretend SEO, to me, can mean many things.  But in this instance, what I’m talking about is situations where you’re called upon to perform your magic on a site.  And that site happens to clearly need hours upon hours of optimization work.  Because it’s in a highly competitive field.  Where the top players have been entrenched since forever.  Or they have hundreds or thousands of pages. And the site you’re charged with has maybe 30 words of real content total.  Spread across five pages.  And two back-links.  From the site owner’s sister’s quilting site, and her cousin’s eBay page – you know the one – where there hasn’t been any products available since he sold that old moldy couch for $8. So you take one look at the site and you know it’s going to take a lot of work. Except you’re told “You’ve got three hours.  Do what you can.” Or you’re dealing with a complex site – that’s got thirty seven categories of  services the company offers.  Saturating 65,000 pages.  And 987,355 inbound links.  Yet, for some reason, with all that depth, the site’s no higher than the 10th page of the SERPs. And you know in THIS case, it’s going to take a full blown audit to figure out this mess. Except you’re told “Just come up with a quick one-page plan that outlines what you’ll do to optimize the site over the next six months.  And oh – you’ve got ten hours a month allotted.”   No More Hair Left To Rip Out Some of you may not have ever been in this situation.  That’s okay.  I’m happy for you.  Really.  But not really.  Because I’m jealous.  That you don’t know the heartache.  Yet. But you just wait.  If you stick around this industry long enough, and diversify your income stream throughout your illustrious SEO career, you WILL Know this evil of which I speak.  Trust me.  You will. For those of you who know what I’m talking about, because you too, have been in either of these painful situations, I ask you – at what point do you say “This is not SEO.  I can’t consciously expend the time you’ve allotted and claim that it’s significant enough to truly be called optimization.”   The “It’s Better Than No SEO” Argument. Countless times I’ve heard that same account manager / employer / client spit out those immortal words.  The concept being that surely, with all my years of experience, and all the miracles of SEO I’ve pulled off in the past, that even with a few minutes being all that’s allocated, I can get some stupid small number of phrases into the site in a way that those phrases will show up on the first page of Google, or Yahoo or Bing.  And thus, “It’s better than no SEO at all”. But is it? How much optimization needs to be performed to truly qualify as genuine optimization?  And at what point, if you fall short of that threshold, do you call it a sham? An illusion?  A scam?  A delusion? I’ve had to ask myself these questions countless times, since I provide consulting services to agencies.  And they’re forever compromising.  Sometimes it’s because the clients they take on have very serious budgetary constraints. And I can understand that.  I don’t LIKE it.  Yet I understand it.  Because it’s the nature of business. Yet there’s just some situations where I say it’s too much insanity.  And I even occasionally refuse to work on a site because of that.  Like just this past week.  I refused to work on a site, let alone have my name be associated with it.  That’s how delusional I felt the scenario was. What About You? When do you draw the line?  Do you even have the LUXURY of drawing that line?  When do you cave in and go along for the pretend optimization pony ride? Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . When SEO Is Not Really

Writing for Attention: Ammunition for Personalised Search

Personalised search is Google’s latest tactic of boosting rankings for domains that users have shown they are more likely to visit based upon their search history. It can be disabled, but when it’s on by default, search (and click-through) history is stored in a 180 day cookie meaning personalised search comes into play only on that browser and machine you are using; the information in the cookie cannot be passed between multiple browsers/machines. There really is only one way to react to personalised search [besides encouraging people to jump through hoops and volunteer to search for you in Google rather than simply typing in your web address] and that is by improving the quality of search listings to maximise click through rates. This should be part of your SEO task list already, but it is now more vital than ever to ensure that your search listing is as enticing as possible to ensure you get that first click. Therefore, should users go back and perform subsequent searches, your website is now more likely to get a boost in rankings due to the history stored in Google’s cookie. How do you do that? Here are some optimisation techniques that are vital for improving search listings. Make sure you’ve got them on your SEO check list: 1. Page