Article
Search Engine Damage Control
Google and other search engines will boot anyone who uses spam tactics to get high rankings. Should marketers fear these threats? You'd better believe it.
But what can be done as damage control if you suspect you've been penalized?
If you believe you have inadvertently spammed Google or others and wish you could clean-up your act, I have some good news for you.
First Things First
To begin, review some of the possible reasons for your page/s exclusion from the database. For instance, Google, and most others, publish a page that outlines reasons your site may not be included. Take a look at each engine to determine whether you've inadvertently breached their guidelines, or have simply failed to follow the correct procedures for being listed in the database.
If you suspect your page was manually removed from a search engine's index because of spamming, the engine will likely not comment on the reasons for removal -- they won't even give you an exhaustive list of practices that can result in your removal.
Spamming Tactics
Below are some of the common tactics identified as search engine spam:
- Cloaking: When one page is served to search engine crawlers to achieve a good ranking, but a different version of the page is served to search engine users. This sometimes involves changing meta tags after a search engine positioning has been achieved.
- Spoofing/Redirects/Meta Refresh: A meta refresh tag permits visitors to automatically be taken to a different page. When this functionality is abused, users are taken to content that's unrelated to their search. Thus, search engines are suspicious of pages with a fast meta-refresh rate, and pages that use JavaScript to perform redirection. Use server-side redirection if legitimate redirection is required.
- Domain Spamming: Identical sites found under different domain names to increase search engine traffic, also known as mirror sites.
- Tiny Text: Overused to hide keyword stuffing.
- Invisible Text: Used to hide keyword stuffing by making the stuffed keywords the same color as the page (for instance, white text on a white page background).
- Deceptive Title and Tags: Irrelevant keywords in the title and meta tags.
- Deceptive/Misleading Links: Setting up pages/links for the sole purpose of deceiving search engines.
- Over-submitting: Using the AddURL form to submit hundreds of deceptive pages.
Getting Caught
If you intentionally spam the engines with any of the above tactics and get caught, you can expect the penalty to be the removal of your links from the engine. Spamming is not worth the temporary benefits. Search engine marketing done right is a long-lasting marketing investment, so don't jeopardize your rankings with any suggestion of spamming a search engine.
Search engines have many ways to detect spamming, including so-called spam filters. They also actively encourage spam reporting by users. So even if you get by the spam filters a few times, others might report you -- especially your competitors.
Getting Back onto Google
If your site is removed from Google's database, the first thing to do is to clean up the page/s and send a re-inclusion request to help@google.com. Google probably won't make any guarantees about if and when it will re-include your site. If everything is in order, your site should reappear in a month with the next Google refresh.
Before you re-submit your site, ensure there are no technical problems with your server: check for any robots.txt files that might turn away search engine spiders. Remember, too, that if you use frames or Flash it can be hard for the engines to index your site. You'll also need plenty of relevant text on your pages and tags if your site is to be correctly indexed by search engine crawlers.
In any event, you should contact the search engine in writing. Also make an attempt to contact them by phone. Admit your mistake and make a sincere promise that it will not happen again.
Algorithm Changes
Should you worry about the changes in search engine algorithms? Yes, but there are acceptable and unacceptable methods for dealing with these changes. Spamming is simply unacceptable.
Currently, the engines are emphasizing relevancy. Algorithms seem to favor relevant content, relevant title and description tags, and a relevant linking strategy. In other words, tell it like it is and be precise in your descriptions. Know which keywords are used to find your site, and use those keywords appropriately. And provide good navigation so the engines can crawl deep into your site.
Algorithms have been affected by search engine optimization practices and user behavior. That's how spamming and best practices have surfaced. And it's also why search engines continually adjust their algorithms.
Paul is president of