Google's New Direction - Could Your Linking Strategy be Hurting Your Rankings?
Posted by Courtney Heard on: 2006-04-14 20:47:16
Self SEO > Search Engine Optimization Articles
Over the past week, most people have noticed significant changes in the SERPs at Google. Web sites that previously held number one positions have dropped to number 89, and some web sites have disappeared off the Google results pages altogether. As is the case with all major Google updates, SEOs have been panicking in forums and there has been much discussion about one topic in particular: reciprocal linking.
The first thing you have to do to understand the direction in which Google is taking
with this update, is to get into the minds of the people who run it. Something that is
so often overlooked is the fact that Google (and any other search engine) is first and
foremost, a business. The reason they offer the service they do, is to make money,
to make stocks soar and to keep shareholders happy. Google’s income comes from
many sources, but the main one is advertising. In order to be able to sell their
advertising real estate for a profitable price, the ad space needs to be seen. In order
for the ad space to be seen, many, many, many people must visit the Google web
site and use the Google search engine. In order for Google traffic to be at such a
level, Google must offer a great, if not the best, search engine service.
So, how does Google offer, or attempt to offer, the absolute best service possible?
By having the most relevant, and most useful search results.
Useful and relevant web sites are sites that are extremely visitor-friendly, sites that
offer a lot of quality information in many different forms, from RSS feeds, to articles,
to forums. Sites that are organized and have developed, naturally, a respect on the
internet. A great example of such a site is About.com - search for any topic on
About.com and you get a page with a lot of information on that topic and many,
many links to other web sites that carry further information. It is, undoubtedly, one
of the best places on the Internet to go for information.
Now, here’s where it gets tricky. In the past, Google has evaluated web sites by
looking at areas of the site that are easily manipulated by webmasters and SEOs,
such as meta tags, alt tags, keyword density, page titles, etc. We all know this has
changed. Google has begun to reward sites with a more natural approach to these
areas, and to penalize sites that have been over-optimized.
The key now, is visitor-friendly, natural web sites. Google will attract more repeat
users, and thus, more advertising capital, if their search results always yield web
sites that have the information searchers are looking for and are easy to use and
understand.
Natural web sites are web sites who’s page titles reflect the page content in an
easily understandable way. They are web sites who’s keywords meta tags contain
only the words that apply to the page content. They have description tags that
reflect the content in a concise, easily understood way. They have image alt tags
that describe the image properly. Most importantly, natural web sites are web sites
that develop a natural link popularity. That is to say, they don’t have someone
working on finding web sites to swap links with. This is an unnatural linking
strategy. A natural linking strategy is to offer a good, resourceful web site and have
people link to it of their own accord because it’s such a great resource. Such a
strategy also includes linking out to quality web sites that offer further information
on your web site’s topic, whether or not they link back to you. This is a huge
indicator that the goal of your web site is simply to offer the best information
possible to web site visitors.
Cross-promotion will happen naturally as well, and links that are a result of cross-
promotion are still considered a natural linking strategy, and as a result, Google or
any other search engine cannot not outlaw reciprocal linking all together. But you
have to be extremely picky about the sites you decide to engage in cross-promotion
with. They must be very relevant and should have a decent presence on Google. Stay
away from automated linking programs, link farms and most importantly,
exchanging links with excessive amounts of web sites. Your links page should look
like an excellent place for your visitors to go should they require further information
on the topic your site deals with.
In short, the most important factor contributing to your Google ranking, is visitor-
friendliness. Amassing enormous amounts of link exchanges simply does not work
anymore. You absolutely must have your web site visitor’s needs foremost in your
mind. If you meet those needs, you will be rewarded both in your rankings and in
repeat traffic.
Courtney Heard is the founder of Abalone Designs,
an Internet Marketing and SEO company in Vancouver, Canada. She has been
involved in web development and marketing since 1995 and has helped start several
businesses since then in the Vancouver area. More of Courtney's articles are available
at http://www.abalone.ca/resources/
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