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Forbes Goes Negative On SEO
By: Jordan McCollum 2007-06-29 It's not what you think: today Forbes wrote about "negative SEO." While we all know the benefits of "positive SEO," Forbes interviews Brendon Scott to find out more about... ...changing your competitors' rankings (because, hey, if you can't beat them, beat them up). As Forbes puts it:
They show seven ways-in pictures (which, of course, have little to do with the actual processes described)-that negative SEO by your competitors can take you down. And by "take you down," they don't just mean your rankings. (Warning: be prepared to be metarefreshed to death.) As edgy as they make it sound, the techniques they list are pretty much old school.
2. Tattling (for anything from cloaking to paid links) 3. "Google insulation": filling the SERPs with so much content (presumably on several sites) that you move your competitors (or critics) right off the page. 4. Copyright takedown notices: this sounds like a great way to get sued-but, of course, that's a marketing technique in and of itself. Forbes says: Search engines can legally link to sites that steal copyrighted content-unless they've been notified of the site's copyright infringement. If a copyright holder (or someone claiming to be a copyright holder) files a complaint, a search engine must remove the page from its index for 10 days while the copyright holder decides whether to sue for infringement. So by filing a copyright complaint against a competitor, a site can sometimes have it temporarily erased from search engine results-though a fraudulent takedown notice is often grounds for a lawsuit. 5. Copied content: "If the same text appears on two different Web pages, one will be penalized in search results to avoid offering users a worthless entry." You keep telling yourself that. At least we can all be assured that duplicate content has jumped the shark. The rest of the technique does sound effective: "Sites that are older and more search-engine friendly than their competitors can sometimes rip off and republish a competitor's content, thereby hijacking its place in search results." 6. Denial of service: You might try to get them Dugg to do this, but that seems a little risky (people might actually like them!), so go for the automated bots. 7. Click fraud. Because the search engines haven't figured out that you can use bots or even actual services to run up competitors' PPC bills. (Granted, they may not be doing much about it and usually can't act fast enough to be effective against a mass attack.)
(via) Comments Tag: Forbes, SEO Add to Del.icio.us | Digg | Reddit | Furl Have a bookmark! - About the Author: Jordan McCollum is a staff writer for the popular marketing blog Marketing Pilgrim. She has worked in search engine optimization with clients including 3M, Little Giant Ladders and ADP. After graduating from Brigham Young University, Jordan joined the SEO copywriting team at the Internet marketing firm 10x Marketing. After 10x closed its doors in December 2006, Jordan became a freelance writer and Internet marketing consultant specializing in SEO. She also has extensive experience with web analytics, conversion rate enhancement and e-mail marketing. |
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