The Dark Art Of Search Engine Optimization |  | Visited: 1559 |
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| | by Dave Davies October 23, 2007 |
| Dave Davies |
 Dave
Davies is the owner of Beanstalk Search Engine Positioning. Beanstalk offers guaranteed search
engine optimization services as well as consulting, training, link
building, and copywriting. For
do-it-yourselfers they provide free
SEO tools
as well as frequently publish to their SEO
blog
to keep you up-to date with the latest goings-on the the search engine
optimization world.
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| Dave Davies
has written 11 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Dave Davies... |
The
title of this article is designed to illustrate the point of this article. Today we won’t be taking a look at black-hat
search engine optimization tactics.
Admittedly, I’ve toyed with them in a “know your enemy” kind of way but
I’m no expert on advanced cloaking techniques nor effective link sp@mming
tactics. What we’re going to cover here
are the hidden (i.e. dark) areas of effective optimization strategy.
I’ve
written numerous times in past articles and blog posts that using tricks to
rank your site highly is, in the end, ineffective as tricks imply a
manipulation of the ranking formula and will eventually become obsolete as the
search engines work to advance their algorithms and shut down such possible abuses. But here I’m going to illustrate some of the
tricks we use to drive traffic to our site.
Is this a conflict? Not really;
these “tricks” aren’t so much directed at search engines as they are website
owners and visitors. These are marketing
tricks, not SEO tricks – they just happen to help you with your rankings.
Before
we begin let’s review an important point about Google. When most people think of Google they think
of the dominant search engine (and in that they would be right) HOWEVER if
Google was primarily a search engine they would be much smaller than they are
now. No, they are an advertising company
and the world’s largest at that. To this
end they need traffic, market share, and clicks. They need you to love Google.com, visit it
often, visit their other properties and offerings such as Gmail. If you do this, the odds of you clicking on
one of the paid ads increases and their primary function is fulfilled. It is driven by this purpose that Google has
developed the most complex search algorithm that has ever existed. Their search is their primary source of
traffic. The better their results, the
more you will return, the greater the likelihood you will click an ad, the more
revenue they generate (thus leading to their continued increases in reported
revenue quarter-after-quarter). Why is
this important? Because this is the
driving force of their current algorithm and will be for the foreseeable future
we can assume that any action that increases relevant traffic to your site,
increases the stickiness of your site and/or increases the number of links from
relevant sites to yours will help your rankings and it will help Google keep their
visitors loyal.
Let’s
also recall the purpose of this article.
This is NOT an article about black-hat search engine optimization
tactics, it’s about the hidden aspects of SEO that are often overlooked. And so, without further ado, let’s get down
to the meat – what are the dark tactics that you can use to boost your website
rankings.
Building A Sticky Site
A
point I’ve made in past articles that I will reinforce here as opposed to
“contradicting” will be that of the importance of a sticky site. Of course, monitoring your statistics to
assess your visitors’ behavior is an important practice for the conversions on
your site however it’s importance from a search engine optimization perspective
is often overlooked. I’ve mentioned
before and I’ll mention again, the search engines have the ability to monitor
the length of time a visitor spends between visits to that engine. If you are on Google, enter “seo services”
into it and visit the Beanstalk site but only spend 5 seconds there before
hitting the back button Google can infer that the site was not what you were
looking for. If it was 5 or 10 minutes
before you returned back to Google they could thus infer that you found content
you found useful to your query.
So
let’s put that more obviously, having a site on which visitors find what
they’re looking for quickly, easily, and in a visually pleasing way will
increase their time on your site which will thus increase the assumption by the
search engines that you are relevant for the phrase the searcher has
queried. This will reinforce that your
site does indeed belong among the top site.
As a disclaimer: this works on a mass scale so don’t go running off and
clicking through to you competitors and quickly hitting the back button. First, it’s unethical (like clicking their
paid links) and second, it doesn’t work like that (how big a hole would THAT be
in the algorithm) so it would only be a waste of your time.
The
how to of building a sticky site I will leave to designers (being an SEO – my
skills lie more in understanding mathematical formula).
Clickability Counts
The
engines know when your site appears in a set of search results and they further
know how often your site was click on when it appeared. The more often your site is selected when
presented in a set of results the more relevant it is assumed to be and thus,
the more entrenched it becomes in that set of results (assuming your stickiness
issues are dealt with).
What
this means is that your title and description matter, not just as part of the
classical search engine optimization tactics we’ve used them for since the 90’s
but also to draw visitors to your site.
Fortunately the end goal of the engines closely matches what your own
end goal should be for your site – maximizing traffic. Let’s take a look at two example titles that
the Beanstalk site could have:
An
old-school over-optimized title:
Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Services Company | Beanstalk Search
Engine Positioning | SEO Services, Internet Marketing, Link Building,
Consulting, Training & Copywriting
Our
current title: Expert SEO Services by Beanstalk
Can
you see the different? While our title
changes periodically as we test new titles for clickthroughs we always keep it
short, easily read, and always such that the whole title will appear in the
SERPs (Search Engine Results Pages). Our
clickthroughs are much higher with shorter titles than longer and we have seen
the same results with client sites.
The
same applies to your description tag but the rules are a bit different. With your description tag you want to make
sure to include your targeted keywords and make the copy compelling to a
searcher. The reason for this is that
when searched keywords are including in your description, is is typically the
description that appears in the SERPs.
This give you an opportunity to determine how your ad to the world
appears. You write your title, you write
your description – write both well and your clickthroughs will increase. And when your clickthroughs go up, the
implied relevancy the engines will assume your site has to that phrase will increase
with it and thus, so too will your rankings for that phrase.
Getting People To
Link To You
We’re
not going to bother discussing reciprocal link building, directory submissions
or the other usual suspects. There are
countless articles out there on those topics; what we’re going to focus on here
are the tactics for getting articles picked up widely the resources you want to
get them onto (and if you’re reading this – you know it works) as well as ways
to get the links that both you and the search engines will love the most – the
ones you don’t ask for or work for outside of creating a great site with useful
content. The best part of these links is
that they not only work to boost your link popularity but they also tend to
drive great traffic to your site. Let’s
begin with articles.
When
you’re working to publish an article there are two main audience members: the
readers and, more importantly, the editors (I say more importantly as they’re
the ones that determine if you have any readers at all). There are some tactics for increasing both:
- Write a
compelling title. This gets back to
the point I was making in the first paragraph. Everyone is interested in black hat
search engine optimization, even those of us who don’t practice it. Readers will be drawn to it as it
receives relatively low coverage and editors like to publishing something
that they feel may draw some controversy.
While this article doesn’t get into black hat tactics as some
editors may have hoped, it will draw them in and get their attention.
- Find quality
related resources and get the article published there. I generally use a tool like PR Prowler to find good,
quality resources to submit articles to.
You can do it manually through a search engine, PR Prowler just
speeds up the process so much that after its first use it’s paid for
itself. You want the places you
submit to, to be related to your industry and you want them to provide a
link back. If you can setup that
link as anchor text instead of your URL – all the better.
- Keep a list
and add to it. If you're going to
publish multiple articles don't start from scratch every time. Keep a list
and try to add a few sites to it with each submission. This will keep your list growing and get
you more exposure/links as time goes on.
- Keep a good
relationship with the editors. They
are the end-all-be-all of whether this tactic will work or not as a link
and traffic building tactic. Make
sure you're polite and don't write nasty emails if you get declined. Read what they say and make sure to take
it into account with future articles.
But
what if you don't want to build links with articles, what if you want to get
links the old fashioned way (and I'm talking about the old old old way – you
know, before there was any SEO value to it).
What if you would like to get people to link to you simply because they
like your content (I know, shocking but it actually happens !!!) There are a few different factors that you
need to take into account to accomplish this.
Here are a few important rules to follow:
- You'll need to
create content that others will want to link to. This is an art in-and-of-itself. I wrote about some of the basic rules
involved with this in a past article “Building Link Bait” and so I
won't repeat it here.
- Get the bait
into social bookmarking sites. This
will get people interested in your topic aware of it. If it's good, they may link to it. Don't just focus on Digg and the other
majors, look around for some industry-specific bookmarking sites. For example, when this article is
complete I'll work to get it into Sphinn, an SEO
bookmarking site.
- Get the bait
into forums and/or blogs. I'm not
talking about blog sp@mming here, I'm talking about finding blogs and
forums that are RELATED to your topic and who's visitors could be
genuinely helped by the tool, information, etc. that you're providing. Don't worry if the blog has rel=”nofollow”
on the links. The purpose is
webmaster awareness, not getting links from the blogs (I'll leave that to
a different article).
- Promote the
bait on your site. Use banners,
links, your blog, etc. to build awareness.
- Provide the
code to link to your bait. The
easier you make it for people to link to you, the more of them will. Provide the code with a text and banner
option and you'll increase the number of people who will link to you.
- Put out a
press release. If it's big enough
news, put out a press release. If
the media grabs it you've won the lottery both in publicity and in high
valued links.
- If the topic
of your bait is searched on the engines, rank it. :)
Conclusion
So these are the
darker arts we're talking about. Not
black-hat, just overlooked more often than not.
Add these to your repertoire of thoughts as you optimize and link
building for your site and you've given yourself a one-up over most if not all
of your competition.
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