Top Rankings Guarantees Debunked (Again)Most SEO Guarantees Simply Provide an Excuse for Lack of Performance |  | Visited: 1109 |
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| | by Stoney deGeyter July 21, 2006 |
| Stoney deGeyter |
Stoney deGeyter is president of Pole Position Marketing, a Reno
SEO firm providing search engine optimization and marketing
services since 1998. Stoney is also a part-time instructor at Truckee
Meadows Community College, as well as a moderator in the Small Business
Ideas Forum. He also contributes daily to the (EMP) E-Marketing
Performance search engine marketing blog. |
| Stoney deGeyter
has written 13 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Stoney deGeyter... |
I recently had a former client come to me to ask my opinion on the
services his new SEO company provided him. He was certain they did not
meet their stated guarantee and wanted me to look over his site to
confirm his suspicions. After looking over the information provided, I
found it interesting that the contract was relatively vague as to what
services they would actually be providing. Outside of the guarantee,
the only real specifics were meta tags and "optimization" of text for
15 pages. The guarantee, on the other hand, was considerably more
specific, stating they would achieve 15 top 10 rankings counted over 15
search engines, from a the 25 plus keyword phrases selected.
After analyzing the site I had to tell him that, by all appearances,
their services portion of the contract had been fulfilled. If they did
even minor editing of the meta tags and page text (and it certainly did
appear to be minor) they did what they were contractually obligated to
do. As for the guarantee, if you throw enough crap (keywords) against
the wall, something's gonna stick. In this case, just one of the 25
targeted keywords achieving a top 10 ranking on each of 15 engines
would sufficiently fulfill the guarantee. Not a particularly high, nor
difficult benchmark to attain.
Each week I get calls from prospective clients looking for some kind of
guarantee for our services. Sure, we can provide a guarantee that gives
us enough wiggle room to be useless, such as the one mentioned above,
but personally, I would rather work with a company that is a bit more
forthright in their business practices.
Doctors don't guarantee that any surgery will be successful (though
they do provide the odds), and accountants don't guarantee that if they
do your books that you won't be audited by the IRS. SEO is not the same
as a doctor or accountant, but these analogies will be useful. Why
don't they provide guarantees? Because they do not have total absolute
control the body or mind of the "client". Aside from the fact that
there can always be unknown complications during surgery (as with SEO),
the doctor has no control over what the patient will do once he is
outside of his care. Anything from rejecting the doctor's advice to not
taking prescribed medications will help determine if the surgery is a
total success or not.
Similarly, if the accountant is not given full control over your
finances, he is unaware if the client has participated in any shady
activities. And, even more simply, the IRS decides who they audit, not
the accountant, much in the same way search engines decide how to rank
sites in the search results.
But a good doctor, however, can substantially improve chances of a
successful recovery and a good accountant can decrease chances of an
IRS audit, but there is no way to provide an ironclad guarantee, nor do
I think either would even if they were substantially sure of success.
In any thing, success takes a long time to achieve, but it only takes
minute to undo.
To continue with our analogies, would you prefer a doctor that told you
they'll make some incisions in your stomach, perform the operations,
sew you back up, and guarantee that the stitches will not get infected?
Or would you prefer a doctor that simply told you what operations will
be performed giving you the chances of recovery? While the first offers
a guarantee of sorts, that guarantee is only a small part of the whole
operation. What good is it if the stitches heal properly if the surgery
is a disaster?
Again, would you prefer an accountant that tells you they'll import all
your financial information into their accounting software, Calculate
the results and guarantee that some of the numbers will be accurate? Or
would you prefer an accountant that tells you that they will make sure
that your information will be inputted and calculated correctly based
on the information provided and will provide you additional assistance
if you should get audited? Audit assistance is a better path than
assuring only some numbers will be accurate.
When I get callers asking me for a guarantee I am always tempted to
appease them, to tell them what they want to hear. But, as with many
companies that provide such guarantees, I might then be tempted to do
no more than the fulfillment of guarantee requires. Guarantees sound
good, but most are not worth the paper they are printed on.
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