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Google's view of search engine optimization
(SEO)
With the addition of this
document to their website, the people at Google appear to be
trying to frighten people away from search engine
optimization altogether. Although they say that "Many SEOs provide useful services for website
owners", they finish the sentence by describing the
range of what those useful services are:- "from writing copy to giving advice on site
architecture and helping to find relevant directories to which
a site can be submitted".
They say that an SEO's useful services include:- writing
copy, giving advice on site architecture and helping to find
relevant directories.... These can be part of search engine
optimization, of course, but they are not what is widely
understood by the term search engine optimization; i.e.
optimizing pages to rank highly. Even writing copy doesn't
suggest anything to do with seo copywriting, and giving
advice on site architecture is to do with website design and
not search engine optimization, although an SEO can advise on
it with respect to crawling.
It is quite clear what sort of things Google considers to
be SEO, and it isn't anything to do with optimizing or, if it
is, it's only on the fringe of optimizing.
The document goes on to say, "there are
a few unethical SEOs who have given the industry a black eye
through their overly aggressive marketing efforts and their
attempts to unfairly manipulate search engine results".
The implication is that search engine optimizers who go
further than the sort of things that Google mentions, and
actually optimize pages to improve rankings (manipulate search
results), are unethical. Google clearly views any sort of
optimizing to improve rankings as unethical.
Later in the document, Google lists a number 'credentials'
that reputable search engine optimizers should have. In
Google's view, a search engine optimization company should
employ a reasonable number of staff (individual SEOs are not
reputable), they should offer "a full and
unconditional money-back guarantee", they should report
"every spam abuse that it finds to
Google", and more, and they warn people against those
who don't measure up. But there isn't a search engine
optimizer in the world, individual or company, who doesn't
fall foul of Google's 'credentials'. There are people who can
write copy (not seo copy), advise on site structure and even
find directories to submit to, but they aren't search engine
optimizers and, in terms of rankings, they are of limited
value.
The purpose of search engine optimization is to improve a
website's rankings. Google see that as manipulating the search
results, and they don't approve. The impression given by their
document is that they are trying hard to scare website owners
into not employing search engine optimization services to
improve their website's rankings. That, in my opinion, is
unethical.
What ethical search engine optimization really
does
Suppose there are 1000 hotels in New York, each of which
has a website. When somebody types "New York hotels" into a
search engine, all 1000 websites are equally relevant to the
search. Because of the way that Google and other engines have
been designed, they normally display the results 10 at a time.
But which of the 1000 hotel sites will be displayed in the
first 10, which of them will be displayed in the second
10......and which will be placed right at the bottom of the
pile?
It is well-known that searchers don't look very far down
the results, so the sites that are nearer the top will take
all the business, and those that are further down will get
none. But which sites will be at the top? Google uses its
algorithms to determine the order of the results. It is
patently obvious that all 1000 equally relevant websites will
not be displayed on the first results page (the top 10). It is
also obvious that equally relevant sites cannot be displayed
where they belong. Some necessarily become more equal than
others.
So what if the owner of one of the websites decides to try
and push his site to the top? Is that wrong? Of course not.
The site is just as relevant as the top ones; it's just that
Google cannot satisfy all the relevant sites. This is where
ethical search engine optimization come in.
Search engine optimization optimizes a website's
pages, so that they will be ranked higher in the search
results for the most relevant search terms, according to what
the website has to offer. Search engines may well display
relevant results at the top, but they can't display all
the relevant results at the top. Search engine optimization
allows the pages of relevant websites to be displayed at or
near the top of relevant search results. And that's
all it does.
So what are search engines like Google so afraid of? SEOs
have exactly the same aim as the engines - relevant search
results. The difference is that search engines don't care
about individual websites, whereas search engine optimizers
and website owners do. That's the only difference. Engines
don't care if a particular website is in the top 10; SEOs care
very much that a particular website is in the top 10. But they
can't get an off-topic site there because the search engine
algorithms see to that. And that's an important point - search
engine optimization can only get pages to the top of
relevant results. The search engines' own algorithms
keep off-topic pages out.
Search engines want relevant sites at the top. As a search
engine optimizer, I want relevant sites at the top, and I want
one of them to be my site. Search engines can't place
all the relevant sites at the top, and they aren't going to do
my site any individual favors, so I give them a hand and
adjust things so that my relevant pages are at the top
of the relevant results. That's all that ethical search
engine optimizers do. They are not against the engines, and
they don't try to achieve what the engines themselves don't
want (irrelevant results). They merely strive to adjust the
results by placing a different, but equally relevant site at
the top. And there's nothing unethical about that. |