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Google_Bombing_or_Legitimate_SEO
| Google Bombing or Legitimate SEO?
Today I visited the WebProWorld forums and stumbled across a
topic "New Google Bombing Technique" and was startled to see
that the topic had been viewed over 22,000 times! It is by far
the most active of the forums in the "Search Engine Insider
Reports" section.
This article is simply my response to that discussion thread and
I hope it helps cool off the heat being generated there. Google Bombing Discussion
The general gist of the conversation suggests that appending a
question mark ? or a pound sign # followed by a keyword phrase,
to the end of an embedded link in a web site could lead to
ranking a site at the top for that search phrase. An example is
given of top rank for a particular phrase, then immediately
forum members post their own URL's in the discussion replies,
using the technique to link back to their own sites with their
own targeted search terms in an attempt to gain advantage with
the technique, many times with odd or obscure terms. This "new"
so-called "#Google-Bombing" technique is simply a routine SEO
strategy that has been used for years by pros. When we optimize
a site for a client, we include keywords wherever possible
within the visible page text. The top priority is ALWAYS page
text and title tags. From there on, ALL uses of additional
techniques are only incremental in value and don't dramatically
affect ranking for targeted keyword phrases.
I demonstrate the ease of ranking for obscure terms on a page
where I discuss the foolishness of SEO guarantees by including
the phrase, "screeching camels" one time on the page in visible
text. Screeching
Camels There are no keyword or description metatags on that
page, yet it ranks number one at Google when you search for
"Screeching Camels". That is not Google bombing. A one-time use
of a keyword phrase on a page got this number one ranking for
that phrase simply because it is an absurdly rare phrase. Use of
irrelevant and misleading keyword phrase stuffing in keyword
metatags, in comment tags (leading
period used in examples to allow display without embedding links
in HTML email) and in ridiculous "invisible text" (using text
the same color as the background) got abusive and so the search
engines began to penalize those who did those things. They will
always attempt to ban the obsessive cheaters and keyword
stuffing liars.
The ? and # technique has always been used legitimately for
?tracking-referrers, calling ?search-terms and #jump-links to
take you to a named anchor within a page. Now obsessive
webmasters are attempting to use the technique to increase their
own search engine rankings. Sometimes when I link OUT to a site,
I append ?WebSite101 to the tail end of the URL simply to let
them know where the visitor came from (referrer) when they view
their logs or use a traffic analysis or tracking service.
The ? technique for tracking traffic is even recommended by
Pay-Per-Click engines which give instructions to advertisers
using the technique to track clickthroughs from PPC ads.
Appending "?overture-keyword" to the end of PPC destination
URL's makes that visior who clicked your ads show up in your log
files and allows you to know the phrase that delivered that
visitor and that the visitor originated from Overture. SEO's
have always used # and ? to advantage in an incremental fashion
to optimize client sites. The jump links to named anchors is
routinely used by SEO's by placing keywords in the #named-anchor
links.
This works particularly well on long FAQ pages and on glossary
of terms pages. Instead of doing what most do and using
Keyword Phrase instead we use < a
href="#keyword-phrase"> Keyword-Phrase< /a>. Of course you'll
need to use it again in the anchor tag at < a
name="keyword-phrase">< /a> Again, just an incremental tidbit to
increase the use of the keyword phrase by a slight margin
THROUGHOUT the site in that same incremental fashion, without
being excessive. The same is done with image filenames < img
src="keyword.gif"> second level directory names
/keyword-phrase/keyword.html, page filenames, and embedding
links in visble page text keyword phrases < a
href="keyword-phrase.html"> Keyword Phrase < /a> rather than the
worthless < a href="wordfrag4.htm"> Click Here< /a>
Every once in a while someone re-discovers these incrementally
valuable techniques and attempts to abuse them a la "Google
Bombing" (as discussed in the WebProWorld forum) and they get
abused obscenely by overly agressive folks that risk being
banned in order to gain short term advantage for their own sites.
This leads the search engines to downgrade or penalize those who
abuse the techniques. SEO is not made up of a single technique
used to compulsive levels. Wholistic SEO is using many
techniques moderately for incremental gains. When you get
obsessive about any one technique it leads to trouble.
Stay out of trouble – please!
About the author:
Mike Banks Valentine is SEO for Mesothelioma Attorney
Referral Service Contact Mike
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