Posts Tagged ‘ethical seo’

Are You Treading The Fine Line With Spam?

Spam is one of the unfortunate realities of the net. The phrase in the real world is that ’some things are inevitable, like death and taxes.’ On the net, the inevitability is spam. It’s annoying and people try to get around it while at the same time cursing its perpetrators. What many people don’t realise is that spam isn’t always created by the evil villains of the net. There are many sites around that venture into spam entirely innocently.

Any site can stumble into spam territory. A fine line needs to be trod when developing a site’s search engine optimisation. Unfortunately, many sites stumble. Having an SEO expert on board can be a help, and you can talk to us at SEO Consult. Having knowledge of dangerous areas can also help.

Most of the points below are well-known areas of spam. They are also areas in which innocent mistakes are most commonly made.

Keyword stuffing. This is one of the first examples of website spam that most site owners ever learn about, and yet it remains one of the most common forms of accidental spamming. The biggest culprit is internal links. While it is advisable to make the most use possible out of your internal navigation, ‘the most use possible’ does have a limit. Many sites make the mistake of featuring their keyword in every link, particularly on the footer navigation where it’s less likely to annoy users. It may be less visible to users there, but search engines know keyword stuffing when they see it

• Cloaking. Presenting one form of information to the search engines and another to your users is cloaking. Sometimes, this can happen for genuine reasons, but can still set off search engine filters. It’s a good idea to consult your SEO expert if you decide to include image descriptions within your code or otherwise feature cloaked information

• Buying links. Purchasing links is a common form of acquiring the link juice a site needs to rank well. As the search engines aim to boost sites that are naturally popular, bought links are becoming an issue for SEO. Companies still commonly use them, but it is suspected that they may soon adversely affect rankings

• Networking your sites. If you have several sites, it can seem like a good idea to use them to boost each other’s rankings. This isn’t always the best way to go about it. The search engines are sensitive to artificial link popularity and have developed filters to give less weight to links owned by a site. In the past, Google has penalised sites that have used a network to gain popularity

• Redirects. Implementing a 301 permanent redirect can be a great way to retain the history of an old page when you replace it. Redirects have, however, become a common form of spam as disreputable companies use innocent-looking pages to lure users onto their sites. If your new page is very dissimilar in subject to the old one, you could be taken off the index

Avoiding over-the-top SEO

Excess is not a topic brought up very often in the world of SEO. Usually, SEO professionals are anxious to explain the range of techniques that can be applied to a site. The restrictions that should be placed on a search engine optimisation campaign are very rarely discussed, if ever. Yet there is always a possibility that an SEO campaign can do too much, and it’s something that every site owner needs to be aware of.

Over-the-top SEO can happen fairly easily. Often, it’s the mistake of a non-professional who is anxious to give their site the best possible chance of ranking. In their eagerness, newcomers can end up keyword stuffing or producing value-low content that ends up harming a site’s ranking. There are many areas of search engine optimisation where the margin of error is small. It takes experience and a subtle touch to deal with these areas.

Keyword Stuffing

A little reading will inform any newcomer about the dangers of keyword stuffing. The term is usually used in connection with spammy tactics that will get a site kicked off the index. This is fine, but newcomers may be unaware of the ease with which a keyword-saturated piece of content can become a keyword-stuffed piece of content.

There is no precise calculation for keyword density. SEO pros have been reverse-engineering search engine algorithms for years in order to discover the miracle keyword equation, with debate roaring every time someone publishes one. Despite this, it is generally agreed that one keyword every one or two paragraphs is the keyword density to aim for. Your own eye is the best guide – if the keywords are too obvious, or the content doesn’t make sense, then you have crossed the line between saturated and spammy.

Too Many Links

Internal links are one of a site’s greatest assets, as they act as link juice for other pages. For this reason, a good internal link structure is vital for any SEO plan. There is the distinct possibility, however, of over-utilising internal links and potentially triggering a search engine’s spam filter. Internal links should be used as part of your SEO plan, but only in a way that makes sense to a human user. This means that featuring the same navigation as a header, footer and side bar is out.

Zombie Content

There is some truly appalling content out there on the net. Everyone has encountered it from time to time. This includes computer-generated content, in which keywords stand out like concrete blocks, and badly written SEO content, which is similarly lacking in value. All content should have a point and provide quality information, not just keywords.

Even if it doesn’t get you kicked off the index, over-the-top SEO can alert the search engines to your SEO attempts and result in a lower ranking. Subtle SEO is one of the many good reasons to consult a professional. You can talk to our experts at SEO Consult about your SEO needs.