Questions to Ask your Potential Search Engine Optimization CompanyPart One
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by Scott Buresh August 22, 2006
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| Scott Buresh |
Scott Buresh is the CEO of Medium Blue,
a search
engine optimization company.
Scott has contributed content to many publications including
Building Your Business with Google For Dummies (Wiley, 2004),
MarketingProfs, ZDNet, WebProNews, Lockergnome, DarwinMag,
SiteProNews, ISEDB.com, and Search Engine Guide.
Medium Blue, which was recently named the number one search
engine optimization company in the world by PromotionWorld, serves
local and national clients, including Boston Scientific, Cirronet,
and DS Waters. Visit MediumBlue.com to request a custom
SEO guarantee based on your goals and your
data. |
| Scott Buresh
has written 39 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Scott Buresh... |
Search is a growing industry, and it
seems that every day there is a new search engine optimization
company in the game. However, the skills of many of these search
engine optimization companies are questionable -- staying on top of
the knowledge curve can be daunting, and getting up to speed more
daunting still. Moreover, there are a huge variety of tactics,
“safe” and “unsafe” practices (in terms of the risk of
penalization), and other important business considerations that you
should think about before deciding on any particular search engine
optimization company.
The following is the first of a
three-part series that provides a list of questions to help you to
determine if the company you are considering is deserving of your
trust. In this installment, we’ll focus on the tactics that search
engine optimization companies might use that could put your website
at risk of penalization or removal from the major search engines.
Ask your potential search engine
optimization company the following:
“Do you show search engines
anything that a visitor does not see?”
There is a common tactic that certain
search engine optimization companies use called “cloaking.” In
simple terms, these companies use technology that enables your
website to recognize when a visitor to your site is a spider and to
then feed that spider specialized content designed to rank highly in
search engines. This tactic violates the Terms of Service (TOS) of
every major search engine. Sites that are caught cloaking are
routinely removed from engines. Therefore, depending on your
tolerance for risk, you may want to find a search engine optimization
company that does not employ this tactic.
“Do you create pages, either on my
server or somewhere else, that are not built in to the navigation of
my site?”
Another common technique that some
search engine optimization companies employ is the creation of
“doorway pages.” Since the term “doorway page” now has such
a negative connotation in the industry, many search engine
optimization companies have their own names for such pages: “gateway
pages,” “bridge pages,” “targeted entry pages,”
“specialized content pages,” and so on. Whatever they are
called, such pages are rarely effective and also put websites at risk
of penalization, as this is another tactic that violates the TOS of
every major engine. If your potential search engine optimization
company does not give you a definitive “no” to the above
question, you may want to look elsewhere.
“What is your link building
methodology? Is it automated, and do you target reciprocal links?”
Quality search engine optimization
companies are concerned about garnering quality inbound links to your
website because “link popularity” plays a big factor in rankings.
If the major players at any potential search engine optimization
company tell you that they do not build links, it’s time to laugh
in their faces, call them lazy, and move on.
Because finding quality links from
quality sites is very time consuming, many search engine optimization
companies have tried to automate the process. One undesirable
approach to link building is automated reciprocal linking schemes,
often responding to the ubiquitous emails that are sent to anyone
with a website, looking for link exchanges to boost a site’s link
popularity. The danger here is that an outbound link from your site
is counted as a “vote” for the site to which it links. If that
site gets penalized, your site may get penalized in turn. (Google
refers to this type of linking relationship as a “bad
neighborhood.”) A good search engine optimization company will
concentrate instead on garnering quality inbound-only links to your
website and adding the type of content that makes it worthy of
non-reciprocal links from a variety of sites.
“Do you use hidden text or hidden
links?”
Search engines, as a rule, do not like
it when a website shows them content that is not designed for a
visitor to see. However, there are search engine optimization
companies that will employ hidden text (text that is the same color
as the background color of a page or text that is hidden behind a
graphic, for example) to try to boost that page’s relevance, and
thus the page’s ranking. Other search engine optimization
companies will use hidden links, typically sized down to one pixel,
that lead to dozens, or even hundreds of pages that are not designed
for visitors to see, known as doorway pages. This is another tactic
that, if discovered, can get a website removed from search engines.
If you are averse to this type of risk, make certain the search
engine optimization company that you are considering gives you a
definitive “no” in answer to the question.
“Have you ever gotten a client’s
site penalized? If so, when was the last time?”
Many quality search engine optimization
companies have, at one time or another, gotten a client site
penalized, either due to a change in the TOS of an engine or an
oversight of some sort. If the search engine optimization company
with which you are speaking tells you that it has gotten a site
penalized, but that it was many years ago, this may not be such a big
deal. But if the company tells you that it caused a site to be
penalized last week, you should quickly procure a cross and some
garlic and run screaming in the opposite direction.
While these questions do not cover all
potentially dangerous methodologies, it has been my experience that
shady search engine optimization companies rarely use only one
illegal trick -- and one of the tricks in their arsenal is almost
certainly listed above. If a search engine optimization company
gives you a lot of evasive answers to these questions, it may give
you an idea of the type of firm that you are dealing with. Unless
you are comfortable with the risks associated with the above tactics
used by some search engine optimization companies, I suggest you find
another vendor.
Coming soon- Part 2: Questions to
determine your potential search engine optimization company’s
competence level.
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