You are currently viewing
"ADRENALYN WEB MARKETING".
Explore our web design in
"ADRENALYN WEB DESIGN "


READ OUR ARTICLES ABOUT
SEARCH ENGINE MARKETING!

--------------

Keywords

How to choose keywords

Keyword prominence

SEO

The factors that play a role in
your web site's ranking

Optimised web-design

Content layering

Search engines strategies

Optimized body description

Content is king

Invisible text

Comment tag optimisation

Meta tag optimization

Title tag optimisation

Hyperlink
URL tag optimisation

Alt tag optimisation

Getting your
PDF indexed

Alternative traffic
promotion techniques

Copywriting

Home page
design tips

Creating effective
body descriptions

Writing content:
focus on your target audience!

Content is king

Writing a business
website homepage

Actractive web page titles

Links

Linking tips

Linking strategies

Trading links

Link popularity development

Website's linking architecture

Automated linking software

16 rules for a good
link exchange request

Pay per click

 

Pay-per-click:
how to increase the
click-through-rate

Pay-per-click: PPC strategies

SEO versus PPC

Pay-per-click: PPC campaigns

Pay-per-click: Landing pages (1)

Pay-per-click: Landing pages (2)

Pay-per-click: PPC management

Pay-per-click search engines list

Pay-per-click:
how to avoid click fraud

How to improve effectiveness in PPC

Pay-per-click:
How to chose keywords

Pay-per-click:
Google AdWords

Pay-per-click:
Google AdWords account structure

Pay-per-click:
Yahoo Search Marketing (SM)

Yahoo SM versus
Google AdWords

Domain names

Domain name strategies

Domain registration rules

Country top domain level - TDL

Semantic Technologies

CIRCA technology:
applied semantics to search engines

Latent semantic indexing (LSI)

Block-level link analysis

Email Marketing

Real simple syndication (RSS)

Google

Google "jagger" update

Google quality score

Google "link" command

Google's ranking algorithm
part 1/4

Google's ranking algorithm
part 2/4

Google's ranking algorithm
part 3/4

Google's ranking algorithm
part 4/4

Google's original patent:
how Google works

Google's page rank

Google's sandbox:
delayed inclusion of new websites

Google's penalties:
getting penalized

Google's sitemap service

Google's search page

search engines

How search engines evaluate relevancy when ranking search results

How to be informed when a search
engine spider visits your site

How to instruct spiders with head-tags

How to prevent duplicate content

How search engines work

Australian search engines list

World major search engine list

Web searchers' behaviour:
shocking web users' statistics

Listing expectations:
how much better is ranking
No. 1 versus No. 10?

web marketing

Online media planning

Seven reasons why customers don't buy

The 7 most common marketing mistakes

12 ways to exceed your client's expectations every time!

Market reseach for new online business

How to set up your best customer profile

Web Marketing Plan

12 tips to build a new SEO Career

How to market your website:
five keys to web site marketing success

How to market your website:
the five web marketing laws

How to market your website:
miscellaneous marketing strategies

How to market your website: a mixed marketing media approach

miscellaneous

Site defacements

Link in a new window

Are you cross-browser compatible?
Learn how to do it

Javascript to let visitors
bookmark your website

Why your web pages don't
load fast enough

Javascript to open a
link in a new window

Hexadecimal

Hexadecimal color codes

Decimal RGB color codes

Does Google penalize innocent websites?


Whether you like it or not, Google is the place to be ranked well. Yahoo! and MSN can offer their share of traffic, but nothing serves up traffïc like a top ranking in Google. Unfortunately, no search engine is quicker to hand out a penalty either.

As the clear leader in the search engine market, it is hard to blame Google for being quick to hand out a penalty on a website. There are hundreds of 'black-hat' SEO techniques and tricks that all aim to 'crack' Google and give a website owner a top ranking without them doing as much work to achieve that ranking.

If one person discovers a hole in Google, it takes very little time for an entire drove of website owners to start changing their sites to take advantage of this hole. But is Google too quick to hand out a penalty? They have claimed in the past that it would be unlikely that a legitimate site would receive a penalty.

However, with all the confusion on the Internet about what good SEO really is, is it possible that a legitïmate site owner accidentally employs a technique that is shared by spammers?

The site owner may have no intention of defrauding Google, but they may receive the penalty all the same.

Google plans to alert site owners of potential problems

There is some great news for website owners who fear they may have been penalized by Google. Google is piloting a new program which will proactively alert website owners of potential problems on their website.

This is definitely exciting for website owners who do not know if they have been penalized, but it should not be taken for something that it is not. Keep in mind the following points:

1. This is a pilot program. It is not a full fledged program that guarantees everyone will be contacted who has been negatively effected. Chances are, you will not be contacted at all.

2. It is an automated program. Google will not have any one person sending out these emails, but a bot that will have to 'discover' your email address. If it can't find one, it will try to guess an email address. If you are good at protecting yourself from sp@m, you may not get a message from Google even if they want to contact you.

There may be a day in the not-so-far future where Google is able to contact legitimate website owners who made an honest (or maybe not so honest) mistake. That day is not here yet, so the responsibility is still that of the individual website owner to make sure they have a legitimate website in the eyes of Google.

The many ways to get penalized by Google

There are many ways to get accidentally penalized by Google. Preventing your site from being penalized takes a lot of attention to detail. Even if you have hired on a professional SEO firm, you should be mindful of the problems that can arise from a simple mistake. Below are several things to look out for on your site.

Duplicate pages

This is a common problem, and a problem that can be difficult to avoid, especially if you have a large website. Duplicate pages are pages that have essentially the same content; it is an old trick employed by search engine spammers.

Search engine spammers would use the same page over and over again, but change keywords at the bottom of the page to create some variance and to focus in on different niches. Accidentally recreating this spam technique can be very easy to do. Below are a few ways in which you could have duplicate pages without even knowing about it:

  • If you use different landing pages in your advertising campaigns to measure ad effectiveness, you are essentially building duplicate pages. If Google discovers these different landing pages, they may think that you are using duplicate content.
  • Sites that offer the ability to print pages often create two pages that have essentially the same content.

  • Using mod_rewrite to create search engine friendly URL's can create duplicate pages. When you use mod_rewrite the server will serve up the same page regardless of whether you use the search engine friendly url or the regular url.

These are just a few examples of how duplicate pages can creep into your website. You should look for more ways that duplicate pages could have creeped into your website. If you find that you do have duplicate pages within your website, you should use the robots.txt file to exclude the duplicate pages.

See the article about robots.txt file which should be helpful:

How to Prevent Duplicate Content with Robots.txt and Meta Tags

Redirecting users

Another favorite technique of search engine spammers is to use redirects to create doorway pages (otherwise known as cloaking).

The idea here is to present one page to a search engine spider that is optimized for the search engine and present an entirely different page to the user. Search engine spammers use all different types of redirects, from complicated javascript redirects to simple http-refresh commands.

There are many valid reasons to redirect users on your website to a different page. Whether you are changing the name of your website or changing the structure, your website pages may not always be in the same place and you never want to lose a visitor to an ugly 404 page (even Google does not like 404 pages).

Google does recognize that you may need to throw in a redirection from time to time. If you need to do so, you should use a 301 redirect. There are several ways to employ a 301 permanent redirect. Below are two examples:

Example 1

Using mod_rewrite

Options +FollowSymLinks
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^yourdomain\.com
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://www.yourdomain.com/$1 [R=permanent,L]

Save this in a file called .htaccess and upload it to your server.

Example 2

Using an Apache Redirect

Redirect 301 / http://www.yourdomain.com/. Save this in a file called .htaccess and upload it to your server.

Keyword stuffing

Keyword stuffing is the oldest search engine spamming technique known. All this entails is using your targeted keywords over and over and over again on your website. Keyword stuffing can happen throughout the content of your website, in hidden text, in the alt property of your images, in the meta tags of your website, in HTML comments, or a variety of other ways.

To see an example of keyword stuffing, take a look at this thread over in our SEO Tips and Tricks portion of our forums. The example above is an exaggerated example of keyword stuffing, but it happens a lot with website owners.

The desire to rank high in the search engines often leads a person to put their keywords in their site much more often than they would do so normally. As a general rule, if the text on your page appears unnatural to you, it will appear unnatural to the search engines.

Be vigilant and be natural

So far Google has done a decent job of keeping spam out of their index. It still finds its way into their results, especially for less competitive keywords, but when Google does find spam they tend to develop new methods to detect that spam and remove it from their index. Unfortunately they will inevitably affect website owners who really do not know that they are doing something wrong.

Google has taken a very positive step in starting their pilot program aimed at notifying website owners who may be innocently doing something wrong, but the responsibility ultimately will always reside with the website owner. If you are having troubles ranking well for your targeted keywords, take the time today to review your website. Ask yourself if you have duplicate pages, if you have any hidden text or are possibly stuffing keywords on your page.

Do you have any redirects which could be misinterpreted? Take the time to re-read Google's webmaster info and familiarize yourself with it.

Getting to the top of Google is hard work, but it is well worth it when you reach the top.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

About The Author: "Does Google Penalize Innocent Websites" was written by Mark Daoust, the owner of Site-Reference.com.

From Sydney to Perth Adrenalyn has created outstanding brand promotion, web site traffic and sales. Call us NOW! P: +61 (0)2 9016 3850 E: info@adrenalyn.com.au