Search Engine Optimization - Myth and Reality!

January
2005!
Myth #1 : Some SEOs and SEMs can make special agreements with
Google, Yahoo, or MSN.
This is a marketing myth that simply is not true.
One can gain accreditation from Google. One can manage massive accounts
and receive a personal live-support agent who can answer questions.
One can even take full advantage of every offer a search firm makes
but one cannot make a sweetheart deal with the paid-advertising arms
of the search engines. The SEM sector brings advertisers to the table
but there are no special deals offered to individual SEMs aside from
the occasional round of free drinks at conventions.
As for SEO firms who claim a special relationship, no one who manipulates
search engine rankings for a living is going to be offered a welcome
mat by the search engines. The SEO sector is tolerated as long as
it doesn't egregiously make a mess. The closest it gets to “special”
is personal relationships that develop between people who work together.
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The only folks who can make special agreements with a reputable search
engine are those offering the search engine something they don't already
have, like new technologies or expertise. If an SEO or SEM firm tells
you they have a special arrangement with search engines, ask for proof
and follow up on it before spending.
Myth #2 : Organic Optimization is always cheap.
I guess this myth is subject to what any individual feels is expensive.
Organic placements must rank among the least costly ways to advertise
however costs in the sector are rising fairly rapidly, especially
among established SEO firms. The amount of work necessary to optimize
a site has increased, as has the time commitment in fostering and
monitoring placements. Search engines are one of the primary information
sources for consumers both at work and at home. As search becomes
more important to society, search engine optimization services become
more important for advertisers thus driving up demand and in turn,
costs. The growth in demand continues to outstrip the number of SEO
practitioners thus driving costs even further. Even with increased
costs, for the size of the audience available, SEO is still cheaper
than a printed directory listing and much cheaper than any other form
of electronic media.
Myth #3 : Submission services are a necessary part of search engine
marketing.
I hate to blow anyone's business bubble but submission services gasped
their last useful breaths last year when every major search engine
moved away from paid-submission indexing and moved to automated spidering.
The one sure way to get into the databases of the major search engines
is to get a link from an established site or a search directory like
DMOZ, Joe Ant or Web Atlas. Once these links are established, the
spiders will come. There are still a lot of businesses drawing supplemental
income from search engine submissions and unfortunately, those businesses
are not doing their clients a great service. A wise solution for businesses
who can't give up the income from submission services is to market
SEO services to their clients by learning the techniques or by reselling
the services of an established firm.
Myth #4 : My rankings dropped. Google must be penalizing me.
Search engine rankings will fluctuate. It is very rare an unmonitored
placement will remain in the Top 10 forever. Even sites with Top 10
placements that are monitored and maintained by SEO firms will lose
ranking from time to time. More often than not, the problem can be
quickly traced back to one of three areas; on-site issues, hosting
issues or link-issues. The search engines are in the promotion business,
not in the penalization business. You really have to work hard at
being bad (or pay someone to be bad for you) to get an actual penalty
applied against your site. Historically, when Google decides enough
is enough, the punishment is harsh, widespread and very apparent.
Myth #5 : Doorway pages are necessary to get placements on all
search engines under multiple keyword phrases.
Speaking of stuff that will get Google to penalize placements, doorway
pages appear to be making a comeback. A doorway page is a replica
of an existing page designed to rank under a unique phrase at a specific
search engine. By creating doorway pages, what started as a 10-page
site turns into a 100-page site bulked up by 90 pages of relatively
duplicate content. Titles, meta tags, word densities and keyword targets
may vary from doorway page to doorway page but the content is basically
the same.
Back in the 90's, doorway pages were very common as there were a
much wider variety of search options using wildly different ranking
algorithms. When Google became the only major dominant search engine
in early 2001, the days of doorway pages were numbered. When Google
stated that duplicate content would get penalized, the technique should
have died. Google however, neglected to dole out effective sanctions
and the practice persisted.
Today, two factors are driving the return of the doorway page. The
first is that ecommerce sites have grown much larger and with the
development of shared product databases, much more competitive. The
second factor is the return of a multi-engine search universe with
both Yahoo and MSN maintaining their own databases. This is a long-term
favorite trick of the affiliate marketing sector and is making a comeback
under the new marketing tool name, Landing Pages.
In reality, the Big 3 search engines all work pretty much the same
way. It is possible to optimize for all three at the same time without
risking placements. You can also optimize a full site for multiple
keyword phrases however; expectations of 2500+ unique product placements
are somewhat unrealistic. A wise guideline is, if you think you need
to make a series of doorway pages, chances are your website is trying
to represent too many different topics and should be redesigned into
several different websites each focused on a unique topic or similar
topics.
If these five myths die this year, the sector will be a cleaner place
to work in. Advertisers will be less likely to be scammed into believing
their SEO has a special relationship with the search firms. They will
also have a more realistic view of the long-term commitment it takes
to run a successful organic placement campaign and will be able to
better budget for services. People would stop obsessing over submissions,
penalizations, and other irrelevances and get on with the business
of producing great websites. Lastly, if the final myth about the value
of doorway pages is undone, consumers would see stronger SERPs (Search
Engine Ranking Pages)and some advertisers would save a lot money and
the eventual heartache of displaced rankings.
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Here
are a few more articles on search engine promotion. I recommended
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