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     Thursday, October 25, 2007
    Thursday, October 25, 2007 10:54:55 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00) ( )

    Google Launches Another attack on Link Pimps.

    Reports abound about another Google attack on the toolbar PR of those who persist in attempting to profit from the pimping and outright prostitution of paid link placement on prominent pages for the passing of link putty.

    http://www.searchengineguide.com/robert-clough/search-engine-guide-publisher-responds-t.php

    http://www.gregboser.com/toolbar-hysteria/

    http://www.searchenginejournal.com/google-drops-pagerank-for-many-sites-paid-links-or-new-algorithm/5890/

    http://www.seroundtable.com/archives/015119.html

    http://www.seomoz.org/blog/toolbar-pagerank-losses-for-hundreds-of-websites

    Just to point to a few

    {public notice}

    NO LINKS IN THIS POST HAVE BEEN  PAID FOR, SOLICITED OR COMPENSATED FOR IN ANY WAY. PLEASE, PLEASE BELIEVE ME MY DOG IS HANGING BY A THREAD AS IT IS

    *********************************

    I Have Solid Proof!

    That little green bar deserves all the attention it gets and I have solid proof!

    Back in '02 my site, my baby, Searchking got whacked. It went from an 8 to a four. Now, here comes the spooky part.

    The very next week my car had a flat! Coincidence ? HA! I think not!

    Then, not having learned my lesson and still persisting in making a public nuisance of myself with PR publicity, my 4 got zapped to a 0. A ZERO! Well guess what? Within just 4 months I had to have a rectal exam and was left with no other options than to have a colonoscopy! Now if that doesn't convince you, well, you must just be refusing to see the finger in the dyke.

    Seriously ----

    Kids, the point of my being so facetious is that life goes on and if you are spending time right now, looking at, reading about, worrying about or being overly concerned with page rank in any shape or form, but especially the PR displayed in the toolbar, then your time is being mis-spent. Few people in the history of the internet have been dealt a harsher hand in regards to page rank drop for any reason let alone for the specific reason of selling links than I have. 

    Fewer still have so obsessed over the penalty to take it to the lengths I did. After month after month and thousands of dollars spent, the one thing I learned above all other things is that life goes on. I don't see how my loss of page rank could have been anymore public or discussed at greater length and guess what? I didn't die, my car's flat got fixed and in regards to my colonoscopy, everything came out all right. 

    I continued making money, I did not go out of business, and the only bad things that happened, I caused myself.

    I realize that I am just a guy whose opinion has little impact and probably deserves less. But I am a guy that has lived through what many seem to think is the worst that can happen and all I can tell you is -- it ain't that bad.

    Income Dependent on PR

    If your income is dependent solely on what the toolbar says and the distance from left to right has shortened, then you are going to have to make a decision to either accept total defeat and try to get your old job back or buck up, evaluate your situation and move forward. If you choose the latter, then your time is much better spent thinking about your business and how to capitalize on the resources you have than it is spent on complaining, theorizing or especially worrying about page rank. I know it's easier said than done, but that is the truth and the real winners are going to be those who can see it.

    We are all free to believe who and what we want but I'm telling you, PR, as we know it, means very little in terms of your business potential or even your placement potential. Page Rank was, (and still is), a brilliant marketing ploy but it's not your marketing ploy.

    Links Have Great Value

    Links have great value for a broad range or reasons. Page rank has very little if any. Sales and profit margins are all that matter. Links can help with that. Page Rank can not. Sales and profits, (or losses), are a reality. Page Rank is a perception.

    I'd like to make one more observation. The more effort put forth on controlling the perception of page rank, the more perceived value it will have.

    The word for the day -- hosted content.

    We now return you to your regularly scheduled F.U.D.

    Peace Y'all

    The SEO Guru

    Comments [6] | | # 
     Wednesday, October 24, 2007
    Wednesday, October 24, 2007 5:35:15 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00) ( )

    If something has value, you should be prepared to pay for that value. There is nothing inherently wrong or dishonest with free-to-submit directories. In theory, you get a listing, (or at least a review), free of charge because the directory is getting data to fill it’s directory providing value to it’s users. The trick here is not giving up your data AND still getting spammed beyond recognition.

    Pay for listing or review is also not inherently bad. Keeping in mind that most review sites only came to be to satisfy a misguided demand for page rank which no one can guarantee except Google. The trick here is knowing what the value is and whether you will get a positive return for your fee.

    Only you can decide what you are willing to pay and feel good about but I can tell you the ones worth paying the most for are the ones that can actually send you some traffic that converts. That has always been and will always be.

    Auto  directory submissions aren’t worth much and you’ll get submitted to a lot of directories that will make you realize you can get something for free and still be ripped off.

    BUT, I believe there are a LOT of directories that can do your site some good in a lot of ways and even the worst ones you submit to will do you no good but they won’t hurt you either. I’ve submitted a lot of sites to a lot of directories a lot of different ways and I don’t know of a single site being penalized because it was submitted to or listed in any directory.

    The FREE Directory Submission Process

    I’ve put a lot of stock into directory submissions long before Yahoo started charging for reviews and DMOZ was still little more than a sparkle in Rich Skrenta’s eye.  SearchKing was actually born in 97 when Jude Lacour and I first partnered on a directory after meeting at the Warriors forum, (http://www.warriorforum.com).  I can’t even remember the name of the engine we built now.  WebWombat or some such nonsense.  

     This was long before Jude became a very wealthy man in the pharmaceutical industry and I became the grandfather of the link brokering industry. Still wondering if I made the right choice. But I digest. Like I said, I have a LOT of experience with directories and there are some who say experience is what you get when you are looking for something else. Whatever ----- experience I have loads of.

    Directories, (especially niche directories), have always played a vital role in the development and direction of the web. In my opinion they still do.

    There is the perception within the SEO community that selling links degraded the value of a large number of directories and while there are some good ones;  many, a great many, deserve to be devalued and even punished by Google  and that submitting to the “bad” ones will do no good and may even cause harm.

    Recently there have been reports about directories getting busted en masse thus indicating there is no longer any value to promoting your site to free directories or paying for a review.

    http://www.seobook.com/what-do-you-call-yourself

    http://www.seomoz.org/blog/what-makes-a-good-web-directory-and-why-google-penalized-dozens-of-bad-ones


    IS THE PARTY OVER FOR DIRECTORIES?

    Even the undisputed king of link Eric Ward, (http://www.ericward.com), has recently stated on The SearchReturn Discussion List:

    > As hard as it is for the hundreds of no-name general directories
    to accept, the recent devaluing of their links has been predicted
    by those of us old timers for years.   Frankly, I hope they have
    saved any money they made, because the party is over.<

    Eric Ward is very smart, been around forever, proven his ability many times over and mostly he is one of those people that when they speak, smart webmasters listen and listen carefully. I have nothing but the utmost respect for him and as much as I hate to, I kind of disagree with the party being over thing.

    I would agree that a lot of old-timers, (such as myself), have predicted the downfall as a business model of directories that were set up simply to capitalize on the links for page rank hysteria, but I don’t see just being a no-name general directory as being any reason to call a cab to take me home from the dead party.

    The fact is there have always been a LOT of little known directories and the industry just keeps getting bigger. There have always been great ones, good ones, ones nobody cared much about and ones that were the very definition of spam crap. But there are a great many little no-name directories that I believe do provide some value worthy of a small effort and/or financial investment. Especially ones that are specific to a location or topic.

    Whether the party is over or not, the point remains that there are and always have been, (and likely always will be), directories that would do you some good and some that wouldn’t.  Some are free and some are paid for a listing or a review.  Some send traffic, some pass a little juice, some do both and some do none of the above. So the big question becomes do we ignore them or submit to them and if we decide they really do provide some marketing value, how do we determine which ones are worth what?

    About 3 years ago, after the 3,000th or so SEO blog or forum post about a top 100 directory list I had seen, I decided to instruct some of my staff to do our own reviews and compile a database of what we referred to as “premium” directories that we then sold to clients as a premium submission service and charged a premium rate.  

    We followed what could be considered the conventional criteria for determining quality.  Age of site, PR, quality of listings, number or listings, whether they were for real or just hustling your email or begging for a backlink, etc. We used a scoring system of 1 thru 5 with 5 being the highest.  Anything below a 3 we discarded and just threw back into the cheap, fast, automated submit pile.

    The thing I found odd was that clients bought the service because they didn’t want to take the time to do their own reviews, that is smart business BUT many of them didn’t mind reviewing every one we submitted to. I’m sure it has something to do with how as humans the fear of not getting as good a deal as we MIGHT have is a great motivator after the fact. We won’t take the time to do it ourselves but we’ll certainly take the time to check to make sure we aren’t being cheated by the people we pay to do the job for us. Maybe that is only as it should be. Whatever.  That is how it is.

    Over time we started to realize that it really didn’t seem to matter much in terms of benefit to the target site. The directories that one client would complain about did as much good as the one that another client loved.  So, we just kept adding to the list until finally we dropped the premium tag and just hand submitted to the entire list by charging for the number of submissions the client ordered because we were simply basing the fees on the time it took.

    SHIFTING FROM PAGE RANK TO TRUST RANK

    Then about 2 years ago, I started seeing some fundamental changes in the search engine placement landscape. I could see the focus was shifting from Page Rank to Trust Rank. http://www.seobythesea.com/?p=426

    The more things we could do that could instill trust in a target site or term the better.  Links were as important as ever but we could see that HOW they were important was changing.

    Now we get into a little of the “Art” of SEO. Art being basically another term for “my opinion”. The art of seo is about taking what you see and using all resources available to you, including the many successes and failures of the past, using them to make educated guesses and being right a lot more than you are wrong.

    If you were a search engine engineer, would you expect the average webmaster to promote his site by submitting to relevant directories?  My answer is yes and that is the primary reason I believe niche directories have value in promoting a website online.

    If you were a search engine engineer which would you trust more? A site that had been submitted to 3,000 directories all the same day or a site that had been submitted to a relevant category in a few niche directories over a period of time?

    My gut tells me that any reasonably intelligent person, or even a programmer, would expect any webmaster to look for and submit to directories that were even remotely relevant to their site or term.  To my mind, NOT submitting to relevant directories would raise more red flags than seeing links coming from directories that were related to the theme of the site. As long as it was pretty obvious that the submission was not automated, (hundreds in minutes is a pretty good clue to automation), that the webmaster had taken some time to “select” this particular directory and this particular category and as long as it had a reasonable title and description, it was an indication that this person was simply trying to promote their site without trying to spam anyone.

    So, whether it’s free or paid for review, taking the time to select an “appropriate” directory and category that you feel could benefit your site, writing a proper title and description that indicates you care what someone reading  it would think of your site and doing these things on a schedule that a human could actually do is not only a good way to promote your site on a virtually non –existent budget but I also think it helps to build a little trust in your site. It is natural, logical and should be done because it is kind of like online promotion  101.

    Ahhh, but whose got the time? Doing all this is no doubt time consuming and in my opinion, the debate should not be about whether directories have value, rather it should be, “is it worth it?”

    So, I built my service to slow down, select only directories that meet the “premium” criteria and manually submit based on:

    #1. The relevance to the target sites overall theme  

    #2. The client’s selected keyword/phrases, (we use our own little premium database to do exact match searches)

    #3. To submit varying titles and descriptions by hand to compliment the specific directory

    #4. Spread the submissions over a 30 day period

    Because of the time it takes, I’m not the cheapest but remember, there is hardly anything in the world that another man can’t produce with less quality and sell for less. For those who consider price alone, they are that man’s legal prey.

    Be warned that submitting your site to 250 directories is not going to magically whisk your site to #1. It helps and should be done as a basic promotional step like I mentioned but it is just another brick in the wall.

    We’re  just about ready to release my little premium directory database and make it available to the public. That will pretty much kill the directory submission industry but to be honest there are better things to focus on that produce better results faster.

    That takes care of the free directories, or as we call it, the DSP.

    Next I think I’ll cover what we call “the bible”. It’s the on page stuff that we have turned into a process that we perform on every site every time. After we do those things THEN we can get creative. It will probably bore the heck out of most of you, but The Guru feels it is somewhat obligatory.

     

    Damnit! Quit jumpin on that bed!

    Peace Y’all

     

    The SEO Guru

     

    Comments [6] | | #