May 13
24
âPenguins are so sensitive/To My Needsâ
If youâre a Lyle Lovett fan, you probably know what Iâm talking about. If youâre not, should explain my otherwise unusual outburst. Itâs surprisingly appropriate to this weekâs Penguin update â the fourth major update (arguably the 25th overall) of the major Google algorithm thatâs targeting spammy links. This update has mainly affected Adult and gambling sites, or websites that have blatantly disregarded Matt Cuttâs advice over the years. Although itâs going to affect 2.5% of English sites (which seems like a lot), it actually shouldnât cause your site any penalties if youâve been paying attention to current Google Values.
Current Google Values can be explained very simply â the overall confusion often comes from the fact it is constantly evolving, and people sometimes work off antiquated information (ironically, one of the issues Google will no longer value).
What Google Values Now | What Google does not value anymore |
---|---|
Quality Content (ie. Something a reader actually needs) | Links! Links everywhere! |
Natural links placed organically | Keyword stuffing |
New and relevant content | Canned or poorly developed content |
Authorship |
Which Hat do You Wear?
Here at DAM, weâve long championed White Hat techniques: an often-used term to describe ethical, Google friendly, above-board methods of achieving success in Search Engine Optimization. True, you once could often achieve quicker and seemingly better results through âdark-artâ tactics, such as buying links or using hidden text, but that was a gamble that no longer pays off. Often, sites that have incorporated questionable techniques are penalized by the constantly improving search algorithms, either by dumping their listing in search results or lessening their search ranks.
What will likely happen when you use questionable tactics
Last year, we were approached by a small business owner who had spent $10,000 on an agency that promised immediate results. It sounded so great that he didnât think to ask the agency which methods they followed: his explanation was âThey were in the top results from Google, so they have to know what theyâre doingâ.
Unfortunately, his site was penalized heavily by Google near the end of the engagement, and the endeavour actually cost the business owner almost three times that amount. Instead of spending $10k on promotions, he ended up spending twice his budget trying to get back on track, and also lost a significant amount of business due to the Google penalization. This is sad, but not surprising or unusual for someone who uses such techniques: Especially this week.
Why you shouldnât have to worry
Our link-building techniques are organic in nature. Instead of stuffing your site with links and keywords, we take a more logical approach to your siteâs success. The easiest way to do this is to think like a consumer. Ask yourself: what do site visitors want? Where do they want it? What do they need it for? As it stands, as long as you stay within Googleâs written webmaster guidelines, you probably wonât go wrong. As for content, follow a simple rule, provided itâs pertinent, useful and of good quality, itâs good. Promote it, get others linking to it, rinse and repeat and continue building strong search rankings.
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