SEO_The_Importance_of_an_Ethical_Approach
| SEO: The Importance of an Ethical Approach
It is, of course, always preferable to deal with an ethical
practitioner, no matter what the business in question is. But
SEO, by its nature, is one of the most sensitive industries, and
here such issues as ethics or ethical business conduct are
discussed, year after year, with a lot of heat and passion.
Why is SEO special? There are a lot of reasons why SEO has
become so sensitive to ethical and moral issues.
First, when it comes to SEO, it becomes extremely hard to define
success and harder still to guarantee it. Your SEO consultant
may be skilful and smart and do everything the right way but
still fail to achieve the results you were expecting, because
the search engines' behaviour is often unpredictable or because
your expectations were originally based on wrong ideas about a
successful SEO campaign. Is it ethical to promise and not
deliver?
Second, various spammy SEO techniques developed by crafty
optimisers to manipulate the results artificially add another -
and very SEO-specific - variable to this equation. Most
discussions on the subject of ethical or unethical SEO turn out
to be discussions on spam-free or spammy SEO methods.
Is it ethical to deceive search engines and their users for the
sake of providing (perhaps) better results for your customer?
No! But, on the other hand, is it ethical to place the third
parties' interests higher than your customer's? Is the
opposition applicable in this case?
The answers No, it is not ethical to promise and not deliver.
So, all goals, possibilities and consequences should be
carefully estimated from the start. No promises without a
bulletproof guarantee.
Deception is never ethical.
When SEO is done properly, there is no opposition between the
customer's interests and the interest of all other involved
parties such as search engines, their users or the web.
Explanations Bulletproof guarantee
What bulletproof guarantee can an ethical SEO practitioner offer
to the client? Achieving #1 rankings for a targeted search
phrase is a tough task, especially if the term in question is a
competitive one. In most cases no such guarantees are possible.
#10 or #20 rankings is easier to achieve, and certain guarantees
become possible, but, again, up to a point. Search engines are
tricky things, sometimes they just do not like certain sites and
keep them away from the first 1000, no matter what is done. In
many cases it would mean a penalty applied to the site by this
particular search engine, but not necessarily.
Anyway, SEO's efforts are never useless. Link building, for
instance, will increase the incoming traffic to the site due to
direct clicks from directories and other linking sites. Good
copywriting and optimised navigation work for conversion, so
even if the total number of visitors remains the same, sales
will improve. Of course, it will involve serious studies of the
target market, competition and target audience's expectations
and concerns. Speaking to visitors is, perhaps, the hardest part
of the SEO art; saturating the copy with keywords without
breaking the readability is, honestly, much easier.
For these reasons, overall increase in traffic and ROI can
always be guaranteed, especially when SEO is applied in
combination with PPC campaigns and other advertising
opportunities.
Deception is never ethical
Quite an obvious statement, isn't it? But not when applied to
SEO. Many search engine marketers will argue the point
violently, saying that deceiving the search engines is all right
because it is the easiest way to achieve good rankings for their
own or their client's site, and if so, everything is quite all
right. "It is our job to deliver rankings", they say.
Thus, the interests of Internet users are ignored. The quality
of search results is not a concern anymore. Search engines are
treated as "adversaries" that should be "fought" for rankings,
not anymore as a source of quality results and help for Internet
users. Such tactics are, in the long run, destructive for the
Internet in the whole - as a medium and a part of our cultural
life - but nobody cares. At the same time, these very search
engine marketers will tell you that they "treat their clients
ethically", because they "deliver what they promise" (i.e.
rankings) and "warn the client honestly about the risks
involved" (i.e. the risk of being banned or penalised by the
search engines and being forced to register another domain and
start anew).
One remarkable point: these people hate it when they act as
searchers (use the search engines to find what they need) and
are forced to struggle through someone else's useless spam. They
describe their experience with such indignation! But that's the
point of being really ethical: "treat others as you want to be
treated".
In the last years, the Internet has become very polluted, all
due to spammers' efforts. It becomes dangerous to link to other
sites, because the risk of running into a bad neighbourhood is
as high as it has never been before. In an attempt to avoid bad
neighbourhoods, honest people will link less, and the best part
of the Net will die of "linklessness", while the spammy part
will grow.
Who benefits if the Net dies?
The answer is: nobody. The Net, this effective and popular
medium created to provide people from every corner of the
civilised world with free and easy access to information, is now
turning into a place used by greedy marketers to earn quick and
easy money through deception. This is the road to nowhere, since
when the amount of useless rubbish exceeds some reasonable
limit, the Internet users will get disappointed and start going
offline, one by one. Without the users, the Internet will come
to its end, and the suicidal tactics of the "black hat" SE
marketers will bring them what they deserve. But the price we
all will have to pay will be huge. That's why we say "no" to
spam techniques today. Tomorrow, it may be too late.
No interest opposition
An ethical SEO will improve the client's site and ensure that in
the end, all involved parties will benefit. The client will
receive a high quality product and improved business through
better visibility and conversions; the search engines will be
treated in a friendly way, and their task of determining what
the site is really about will be simplified greatly; the
visitors will enjoy exploring the site and making use of
information and services it provides; the Internet will receive
another great, valuable resource.
It's been noticed that when the search engine rankings alone are
considered "the client's best interest", and the scope of work
is determined with this approach in mind, the end user (site
visitors) often becomes neglected. The copy is written with
search engines and only search engines in mind (then it will,
probably, be cloaked to "hide" the "successful" writings from
competitors and prevent stealing by another unethical SEO). What
the visitor will see is treated as the least important part of
the process. As a result, good rankings may well be achieved
(not for long: banning from the SE indices will happen sooner or
later, anyway), but sales remain on the same level (or go down).
Is it in your best interest? Are you sure?
About the author:
Irina, Ponomareva. I joined Magic Web Solutions ltd. (UK),
Dartford, Kent, on March 2003. I've been acting as a web master,
a developer, and an SEO specialist ever since.
After practising search engine optimisation for a year I then
launched Spider Friendly - the autonomous SEO branch of Magic
Web Solutions (UK) offering SEO/SEM services - in co-operation
with my colleague Dmitry Antonoff.
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