One of the most frequent questions
I get asked about my ebook, Don't Get Banned BY The Search
Engines, is whether I amended it to include post-Florida
Google. "Florida" is the code name that search
engine optimizer wizards gave to a November, 2003, shakeup
at Google that left many webmasters covering themselves
up with makeshift fig leaves while dangling upside down
above the proverbial crocodile moat.
I am tempted to explain that, "No, I did not amend
it, because nothing has really changed." But just try
telling the world that Bill Clinton did not have "sex"
with Monica Lewinski. Yeah, right.
So I take the lazy way out and I just say, "Yes."
But the guilt has been creeping up on me, grasping at my
skin, gnawing away at my bones, chewing on my heart, mauling
my conscience, and spitting out my toenails one by one.
So this is confession time. Don't Get Banned By The Search
Engine has not been amended to include post-Florida Google.
Is this because I am peddling stale goods? Am I leading
people astray? Do I have a clue what's going on? "No",
"I hope so", and "Maybe".
In fact, nothing really has changed at Google, and webmasters
who have been following Google's guidelines can just keep
doing what they have always been doing, just as Presidents
who follow public decency guidelines can keep doing what
they are doing (until we vote them out of office for other
reasons, of course).
"But I followed the guidelines, and I still took bullets
in several vital organs," I hear many webmasters say.
In fact, very few webmasters have been following Google's
guidelines. Most have been following the Clinton what-can-I-get-away-with
fig leaf guidelines.
Remember that Bill Clinton never had "sex" with
Monica Lewinski. Technically. Honest, he did nothing wrong.
He followed the rules by not having "sex" with
Monica Lewinski. In fact, he was seen in public not having
sex with Monica Lewinski on several occasions.
And webmasters follow the rules by not linking to "link
farms" or "overoptimizing". Sure, they will
link to sites that have nothing to do with their site's
topic, but not to a "link farm". And they will
"exchange links", but surely that does not violate
Google's" uniquely democratic nature of the web"
principle. As long as you are not actually caught publicly
stuffing the ballot box, how could Google possibly suggest
that you are doing so?
So here are my post-Florida rules:
You only link to relevant sites, because that's what you
know Google and your visitors want. Keep doing that.
You don't exchange links, because that would be stuffing
Google's ballot box and that is NOT something Google wants.
Keep not doing that.
Your link does not appear on many useless "links"
pages, where it has to share PageRank with dozens of other
web sites. Keep not doing that.
You accept links only from relevant web pages, because
you know that's the only meaningful traffic ... and that's
what Google wants. Keep doing that.
Your links look different on different web pages around
the Internet, because that's how a democratic process would
create your links. Keep doing that.
You keep adding relevant content to your web site, because
that's what you know Google and your visitors want. Keep
doing that.
See? No change. And if there is a change, it simply means
that you were not following Google's guidelines in the past.
Oh sure, technically you might have been following Google's
guidelines, but technically Bill Clinton didn't have sex
with Monika Lewinski. Another round of fig leaves, anyone?
Google implemented "stemming" along with the
Florida update, or more likely a few weeks earlier. Since
your inbound links are varied and often unique, you probably
already are taking advantage of stemming, so it won't bother
you. And since you write meaningful copy for your visitors,
you probably already have all the stemming you need right
in your copy. You are ready to really excel in Post-Florida
Google.
Google is also implementing a "communities" factor.
Since your inbound links all come from relevant web pages,
you are already part of the community. You are already well
placed to succeed in Post-Florida Google, right?
Google has implemented "penalties" for some typically
overoptimized terms. Actually, I think penalties is probably
the wrong word, but that is what most SEOs are using. Since
you write quality content, meaningful headers, and don't
cut and paste the same phrase over and over in every possible
place, you are ready to conquer Mount Google.
In other words, if you were following Google's guidelines,
not the Bill Clinton fig leaf guidelines, just keep doing
what you are doing. For the rest of you, isn't it time you
dropped the fig leaf and wrapped yourself up in something
a little more substantial that will weather the high winds
of Google's next big storm?
And, "No." I did not amend Don't Get Banned BY
The Search Engines to include post-Florida Google because
I never advised people to follow the Bill Clinton fig leaf
guidelines in the original edition.
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