TechJournal South
Header

Posts Tagged ‘Black Hat SEO’

Four tips on Search engine optimization from AOL’s SEO director

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011

Simon Heseltine

Simon Heseltine

By Allan Maurer

WASHINGTON, DC – AOL has an enormous amount of content posting daily, including the Huffington Post, and it wants as many hits on each story as possible. The man in charge of AOL’s search engine optimization efforts, Simon Heseltine, says one key is adaptability. “Working in SEO is a constant education,” he says.

“You have to keep your finger on everything all the time. Google changes its (SEO) algorithm daily. Some changes are minor, some very noticeable. But change is inevitable and it can change very quickly.”

People figure out how the algorithm is ranking stories and take advantage of it, resulting in once but no longer successful tactics such as keyword stuffing. Google not only changes the algorithm daily, tweaking it, the company also runs Panda from time to time. The initial run knocked out a lot of content farms relying on SEO tricks instead of high quality content.

Heseltine, a director of search at a DC agency prior to joining AOL, writes a regular column for SearchEngineWatch.com on a variety of topics within the marketing industry, and has previously written for other industry sites, such as SearchEngineLand.com (for their in-house marketing column). Simon teaches SEO at Georgetown University in Washington D.C. as part of their Digital Media Management program.

Will discuss how social affects SEO at Digital East

He is among dozens of Internet, digital media, social media, and marketing experts who are participating in Tech Media’s Digital East conference at Tysons Corner, VA, Sept. 28-29. He will discuss the effects of social media on AOL’s SEO efforts at the event.

We asked him to share four quick SEO tips with us.

Four SEO tips

Make sure the search engines can crawl your site

First, he says, “Make sure your site is crawlable (by search engine spiders). It’s amazing how many sites the engines can’t actually crawl because of a mistake with the site’s architecture or robo settings preventing the engines from crawling it.” This is no joke.

WordPress, the blogging system bringing you the TechJournal and tens of thousands of other blogs online, has a privacy setting that has to be checked to allow search engines. When we shifted from a different content management system to WordPress, it was not turned on immediately and of course led to a serious loss of traffic.

“When people move from a staging site to production, a lot of people forget to move the site to public so the engines can crawl it,” Heseltine says.

Find the right key words

Second: “Make sure you type in the right key words. Find out what people are looking for that is relevant to your story and make sure that’s what you target.”

Use key words

Third: “Make sure you use those key words in the headline and the content.

Link to yourself -

And fourth, “Make sure you link to yourself.” By that he means link to your site’s previous content to “spread readers around your site.” There are software products that will help do that. It is otherwise a time-consuming to do by hand. We have noticed that we get hits on that past content when we link to it in newer stories, however, so it does work.

Heseltine doesn’t stop there. “This is important,” he adds. “Write for readers, not for search engines.”

Regarding social media and SEO, which he will discuss more fully at Digital East, Heseltine says, “Even if you are not going to use a particular social network now, reserve your name on them. You don’t want spoofing (where a third party grabs the name and posts using it).

He also offers a warning: “If anyone out there is actually looking for an SEO company and you see a “guarantee” they can get you into the top five or ten results, run, don’t walk to the nearest exit. With all the changes the engines make, no one can guarantee to get you in the top five or ten.”

He didn’t say this, but even if they can, if the company uses so-called “black hat SEO” tactics, they’ll eventually get caught and your company’s Internet rankings may suffer accordingly – which is what happened to retail giant JC Penney.

 

 

Five SEO tactics to avoid in 2011

Friday, April 8th, 2011

Lindsay Wassell

Lindsay Wassell

Search Engine Optimization is not something you learn today and know forever. “Search engines change their algorithms almost daily,” says SEO expert Lindsay Wassell of Florida-based KeyphrasSEOlogy, an SEO consultancy.

Wassell, a partner and consultant at KeyphaSEOlogy, writes about SEO and Site Auditing at seomoz.org and keyphraseology.com. She has spoken to advanced Internet Marketing and SEO audiences at SMX, SEOmoz Training, SHARE and the Microsoft Speaker Series.

She is among the dozens of digital gurus, Internet mavens and top executives participating in the upcoming TechMedia Digital Summit at the Cobb Galleria in Atlanta May 16-17.

Can you fool Google?

While SEO experts can suggest hundreds or more ways to better your SEO strategy legitimately, it’s also a good idea to know what not to do. And that may include things that worked weeks, months or years ago but may land you in Google’s doghouse now. “Google is a lot smarter than people think,” says Wassell. “They build sophisticated technology to try to find and devalue spam.”

They also have a large human team dedicated to searching for and devaluing spam. “So if you’re trying to fool a search engine,” says Wassell, “a best practice” is to ask if your page will stand up to human scrutiny. “Will a real person trained to recognize spam view this as good content?” she asks. “If not, you better re-evaluate your search strategy.”

They didn’t need the black hat

Even major brands can go awry of good SEO practices and pay a high price. Wassell points to the New York Times article about retail giant J.C. Penny, which hired a firm that used questionable tactics to give the company’s web presence an artificial boost, a tactic that worked — for a while. Then Google caught them those site rankings dropped precipitously.

“They didn’t need to get mixed up with black hat practices,” says Wassell. “They could have had more long term results with white hat practices.”

She notes that the company may not have even been aware that they were using black hat techniques. “When you hire a company to do SEO, keep track of what they’re doing,” suggests Wassell. “I’ve heard stories about firms doing SEO work who won’t tell their clients where their links are, saying its proprietary. If you’re working with an SEO firm, nothing they’re doing should be a secret to you.”

She adds, “Imagine doing a marketing campaign with a print ad agency that won’t show you the creative or tell you which magazines your ads will appear in. That’s crazy. Don’t let an SEO firm do everything in a black box. Be concerned with long term success.”

The basic criteria for good white hat SEO, she points out, is to publish content a user wants to read and finds valuable. “It comes down to producing quality content people want to read and share to create a buzz,” she says.

Wassell says that it’s easy to find incorrect information about SEO on the Web, “Because nothing goes away.” But things that worked in the past may actually be counter-productive now.

Five SEO tactics to avoid in 2011

1. Keyword stuffing. “It used to work. You could put every keyword under the sun in your meta tags. When we first did SEO, it was about meta descriptions and keywords. Now it has gone far beyond that. Now, using the Meta Keywords tag “is a giant waste of time,” she says.

2. Don’t name your images with a lot of keywords.

3. Don’t list every zip code and city within a 10-hour drive of your business.

4. Don’t use hidden text – over an image, using white text on a white background, link from a small character such as a period or hyphen or comma, or hide text with CSS.

5. Don’t sign up for: link schemes, reciprocal linking, link farms, a link wheel, a link exchange (unless it’s a real and substantial business partnership or relationship) or use multiple linking (two-way, three-way or any other way).

Those are just a few of  the 32 don’t do SEO tactics Wassell lists in her own blog post: 32 SEO Tactics to Avoid in 2011.

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com