spiders > ProWeb SEO Services
What is SEO?
Before I get to the question, I would like to share a recent experience. (If you are only here to find out what SEO is, please skip to the next section.) Not too long ago, I had a somewhat-enlightening conversation with a good friend by instant message. For the purposes of this blog post, I will refer to him as “Skeptic.” The exchange went something like this:
ProWeb: Hey, I’m currently looking for SEO work, if you happen to run across anything. Just figured I would throw that out there.
Skeptic: What is SEO?
ProWeb: Seriously?
ProWeb: Aren’t you in the computing field?
Skeptic: Apparently not that part of it.
ProWeb: Search Engine Optimization
Skeptic: No wonder
Skeptic: F that BS noize
Skeptic: What exactly do you do?
ProWeb: Optimize sites so that the search engines value them more, increasing traffic, etc.
Skeptic: How many have you done so far?
ProWeb: One, for about two years and several others for less than a year.
ProWeb: But… the main site is in an *extremely* competitive industry in Vegas.
Skeptic: That has always seemed like a scam industry, definitely not what I consider “computing.”
Skeptic: I hear hidden keywords at the bottom of the html works.
ProWeb: Keyword stuffing is outdated. Search engines dislike hidden text and misrepresentations. That’s late-90s stuff.
Skeptic: I know the company I was working for has someone do stuff for them, but I have never looked into what exactly people are doing.
Skeptic: Nick, download the free Microsoft development tools and learn to make web APPLICATIONS.
Skeptic: That is where the money is.
ProWeb: Well, I already possess the SEO skillset
Skeptic: Obviously a lot of others do too…
ProWeb: …and I do realize it might sound like mumbo-jumbo to some people, but the difference between being on page 2 of Google and page 1 is *enormous* and SEO is much better than PPC advertising in the long run.
ProWeb: Anyway, just trying to network a bit. :P
Skeptic: No worries… Sorry to sound like a jerk.
ProWeb: No, it’s cool. Gives me a new perspective.
The skeptic in this conversation has been working with computers for years. He’s currently designing web applications for a big company and did not even know what SEO stands for. (This blows my mind. I really thought he was joking at first.) Then – when I explained what SEO was – he immediately referred to it as a “scam industry” and referenced a specifically scammy (and long-outdated) way of tricking search engines into thinking your website has more to do with a particular topic. If technically literate people like him have such a skewed perspective on Search Engine Optimization, then I’m going to have a tougher time with internet marketing than I previously believed.
What SEO is
This all depends on what the definition of “is” is… Okay, not really.
SEO is an acronym for “Search Engine Optimization.” (You’re probably thinking, “But the question was not ‘What does SEO stand for?’” and you’d be correct, but we have to start with the basics.) SEO is also – to put it in simple terms – the process of optimizing a web page to be more prominent in the search engine results pages (SERPs) naturally, or organically, (which just means “without paying for advertising.”) Additionally, SEO is just telling the search engines specifically – and in a way that machines can understand – what your website is all about. Search engines want what is best for the users and good SEO works best when it focuses on the users as well. A basic understanding of how search engines work and how people use search engines to find what they are searching for is essential for effective SEO. Search Engine Optimization is not a particularly difficult discipline, but it does require specific knowledge, attention to detail, (more than) a modicum of creativity and a desire to learn …and to keep learning in a constantly changing landscape.
In their Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide, Google says,
“Search engine optimization is often about making small modifications to parts of your website. When viewed individually, these changes might seem like incremental improvements, but when combined with other optimizations, they could have a noticeable impact on your site’s user experience and performance in organic search results.” (Google’s SEO Starter Guide)
Wikipedia says,
“Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of improving the visibility of a website or a web page in search engines via the “natural” or un-paid (“organic” or “algorithmic”) search results. Other forms of search engine marketing (SEM) target paid listings.” Wikipedia also says, “As an Internet marketing strategy, SEO considers how search engines work, what people search for, the actual search terms typed into search engines and which search engines are preferred by their targeted audience.” (Wikipedia entry on SEO)
In conclusion:
Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is the method of enhancing the rankings of a website in the unpaid search results. This is usually done with many small changes to the website and frequently results in more organic traffic. There are many other components to SEO, but on the very most basic level, SEO is about optimizing your website so that the search engines realize what your site is about.
What is “black hat” SEO? (or: What SEO is NOT)
Unfortunately, most people – like the Skeptic above – seem to believe that all SEO is a scam industry. It’s not. Don’t get me wrong… there are a lot of shady people out there claiming that they are doing “search engine optimization” while manipulating the search engines, (and frequently, their clients.) This is generally referred to as “black hat.” The SEO industry as a whole gets a bad name because of Black Hat SEO. This method of “optimization” is also called spamdexing and it degrades the quality and relevance of search queries and the ultimate goal of the search engines is to find and remove the websites that use these spammy tactics. These are the most common ways that people try to manipulate the search engines:
- Link Fraud – Backlinks to a website count as “votes” for a website and Link Fraud is artificially enhancing those votes in order to make the search engines believe that your site is “more important” than it actually is… JCPenny was recently penalized because their SEO consultants were using this practice.
- Content Manipulation – Keyword stuffing is just one form of Content Manipulation. Content aggregators, content farms and content scrapers steal existing content that they sometimes change slightly (article spinning) or they hire people to produce cheap, low-quality content with the intention of gaining traffic from the search engines.
- Cloaking – Some websites will show different information to the search engine spiders than the users see when they visit the site. Cloaking is any type of content manipulation that shows (or hides) information from either the search engines or users. Hidden keywords at the bottom of your site would be considered keyword stuffing, but it would also be considered cloaking – which is just as bad or worse – but you can still find websites with hidden keywords all over them.
- Hacking – Hacking is when someone gains unauthorized access to a website in order to change the data or to infect the site with malware or spyware with the intention of tricking the search engines.
Free Search Engine Submission
Free search engine submission is an outdated concept. You really don’t want to mess around with any SEO consultants that offer this service. It’s been a decade or more since the major search engines really needed submissions to find websites. Since shortly after the year 2000, search engine spiders have been crawling the entire network of sites on the Internet to find and index every link on the web. They discover and add URLs to the index naturally so that you no longer need to submit sites to search engines manually. Submit site, add URL, submit URL and search engine submit are a thing of the past. You can still add your website to Google, Yahoo or Bing, but the lists of web sites that they collect using submission forms are rarely used. The best thing you can do to get indexed by the search engines is to get a link from a good website. It’s that easy.
Webmaster Tools and Sitemaps
Of course, it’s still a good idea to use webmaster tools on these sites and submit a Sitemap through that interface. The key difference between submitting a Sitemap to webmaster tools and submitting a URL is that Sitemaps give the search engines more information about individual pages that can be found on your site, not the location of the site itself. The Sitemap will also tell the engines which of your pages you consider to be the most important and inform them about pages on your website that the spiders may have missed during a crawl.
Google Sandbox
This website for ProWeb SEO Services is brand new. The domain name was purchased on January 19, 2011 and this is the first entry, one day later. New sites have a disadvantage in SEO because the search engines tend to believe that older sites are more trustworthy and reliable. This is mostly because the landscape of the Internet is ever-changing and many new sites just don’t stay around for very long.
Google, in particular, supposedly keeps new websites out of their search engine ranking algorithm for a little while after their spiders discover the site and add it to their index. This is known as the “Google Sandbox” and, while some people deny the existence of a sandbox, the “sandbox effect,” for whatever reason, definitely seems to exist.
My previous experience with SEO has been on already-established websites and this is the first time that I’ve done any search engine optimization with a completely new site. I’m curious how long it will take me to get out of the sandbox (if it actually exists) and to show up on search engine results pages.
It’s pretty safe to say that if you’ve searched for something related to SEO or SEO Services and you found ProWeb SEO Services then I’m doing something (or hopefully, many things) right.