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Are There Guarantees In SEO?
By: Marta Turek 2009-07-14 An interesting commenter dialogue discussing SEO guarantees took place on my Marketing Pilgrim guest post. An innocent comment supporting the articles take on the vast array of grandiose guarantees and claims made in the SEO industry, led to a debate on SEO ranking guarantees vs. guarantees based on performance based pricing. There is a clear difference between the two.
This post will shed some light on the straight SEO rankings guarantee that should be avoided at all costs and the pay for performance (PFP) scenario that can actually cushion the risks of SEO. According to the Oxford dictionary, a guarantee is: The intrinsic problem with most SEO guarantees made online is that expected quality or formal assurance of fulfilling an obligation is devoid in these guarantees. There is absolutely no element of customer value because the guarantee is driven by the notion of making an easy buck through the manipulation of the uninformed rather than fulfilling a value proposition. Whats wrong with this you ask? 20 top 10 rankings across 15 search engines, that sounds pretty good! That is exactly the problem, it sounds good, but its not! Lets break up this statement " where are the loopholes?
How do you know how valuable or competitive these keywords will be?
First problem " there are ONLY 3 major search engines, they are referred to as the Big 3 or Tier I search engines, they are: 4th on the list is Ask.com, this engine actually has its own search engine and feeds other engines. The other search engines such as (AOL.com, iWon.com, EarthLink.com, DogPile.com, MyWay.com etc) feed their search results from the above four engines in some form or other. For a clearer picture of market share, a July 2009 Hitwise report summarises the current market share picture: In other words, In June 2009, Google was utilised for 74.04% searches performed by the sample of 10 million U.S. Internet users. The search engines (Google, Yahoo, Bing, Ask.com) account for 98.63% of the total searches, leaving all the other search engines with 1.37% share for which to compete! The final word: The above guarantee will rank your site across 15 major search engines, 11 of which account for 1.37% search engine market share for keywords whose value impact on ROI are questionable without further information. For further insight on some of the shady practices used by certain businesses that guarantee rankings, check out this YOUmoz entry. Guarantees like the one discussed, abound and it is primarily for this reason that reputable SEO firms dont promise guaranteed search engine rankings. This model has its benefits for the uncertain client as it provides a safety net and minimises client risk. It is different from the straight SEO ranking guarantee because it says: If SEO company achieves X, client pays Y, but if X is not achieved, client does not pay Y. The focus of the guarantee changes because the SEO provider is no longer guaranteeing SEO rankings (which in effect the SEO company cannot control) but rather guaranteeing its service. What this says is this: We (SEO company) are confident that you (the client) will be satisfied with our services. We (SEO firm) do not control rankings but we do control our own strategy and we are confident of our abilities. Thus, if we do not achieve the agreed to goals of meeting satisfactory SEO results, you (the client) do not make any payments. But what are Satisfactory SEO Results? It is for this reason that whatever SEO agreement you sign, you need to be sure that you understand the lingo, jargon, fine print and any other question marks on which you are unclear. Any reputable SEO firm will explain exactly what the contract states and should, if asked, break down the terminology in such a manner that both parties are completely clear on what the agreement is really saying. Pay for performance may work for some clients but not every SEO firm will offer these types of agreements. Why? Try saying to your lawyer that youll pay them when youre happy with the level of service they are providing you! So, stay away from SEO ranking guarantees, consider PFP if that rocks your boat but most of all, do your research, know what youre signing and dont be hoodwinked by online scammers! Surely, if the No.1 Google position for a term like office furniture is potentially worth millions of dollars, how on earth can this term be ranked in the top position for a few hundred dollars? It cant! Get used to it " reputable SEO is a resource intensive, high value, medium-to-high cost, long term investment! If you want to make millions from your rankings, cough up more than a few hundred bucks to achieve those positions! CommentsTag: Google, Search, SEO Add to Del.icio.us | Digg | Reddit | Furl Have a bookmark! -
About the Author: Marta Turek has been involved in the Search Engine Marketing (SEM) industry since 2007. She spent her first 2 years working at an SEM agency in Melbourne, Australia. It was in that time, working closely with clients that her passion developed for educating people and helping them gain a broader understanding of SEM. An advocate of SEO standards, she shares her perspective on her blog: http://semstreetcred.com. |
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