• Print Friendly and PDF
  • Print Friendly and PDF
Nick Stamoulis

Will Your Site Be Flagged for Over Optimization?

comments 2 comments  |  1031 reads

The SEO industry exists mostly because of Google. Whether we SEO professionals love or love to hate the search behemoth, we all have jobs because of Google. Even whispers and rumors of an algorithm update can have a major impact in the SEO world, because the way we do our jobs is directly influenced by how Google does theirs. So when Matt Cutts, head of Google’s search spam team, announces that Google is working on a tweak to the algorithm that will punish sites that are too optimized for SEO, everyone gets a little jumpy. Here is what Matt Cutts had to say about the pending algorithm update at a SXSW panel a few weeks ago;

… the idea basically is to try to level the playing ground a little bit. So all of those people who have sort of been doing…over-optimization or overly doing their SEO, compared to the people who are just making great content and trying to make a fantastic site, we want to sort of make that playing field a little bit more level. And so that’s the sort of thing where we try to make the website, the Googlebot smarter, we try to make our relevance more adaptive so that if people don’t do SEO we handle that, and then we also start to look at the people who sort of abuse it whether they throw too many keywords on the page, or whether they exchange way too many links, or whatever they’re doing to sort go beyond what a normal person would expect in a particular area.

After news of the pending over optimization algorithm update hit the web the other week, a few of my clients wanted to know how this was going to affect their websites. Were their sites at risk of an over optimization penalty? I read a few more recaps of the panel discussion to get a better understanding of what exactly “over optimization” means to Google, and I told them that as long as their site has been practicing white hat SEO all along (which it definitely has since my company started managing it) then you are in no danger of being flagged for over optimization. Matt Cutts even admitted, “If you’re white hat or doing very little SEO, you’re not going to be affected by this change.”

This update is designed to help smaller, mom-and-pop websites that are producing great content and have user-friendly websites to perform better in the search engines, even if they don’t have the SEO budget to compete with the big brands. Personally, I think that’s great. There are plenty of smaller websites out there that do everything by the book when it comes to SEO, but they are blocked out of the SERPs because bigger brands can just dump money into their SEO campaigns. Giving these quality websites the opportunity to really make an impact in the search engines is long overdue.

Every since Google came out with the first Panda update last year that put the kibosh on content farms, they have moving in this direction; great content is what matters the most for great SEO. I told one of my clients that since their white has been well optimized in accord with Google’s quality guidelines AND they are producing a ton of great content, this update should theoretically help their website do even better in the SERPs. So if you are worried about getting an over optimization penalty from Google, double check your SEO efforts. If everything has been white hat then you have nothing to worry about.


Nick Stamoulis

Nick Stamoulis, a SEO and search engine marketing industry veteran, is the President of SEO company, Brick Marketing. Nick Stamoulis also writes daily in his SEO blog, the Search Engine Optimization Journal and publishes one of the largest SEO newsletters with over 130,000 opt-in subscribers.
Categories:

2 comments »

Jacob

Jacob

Great Content

I just wanted to clarify what it is you mean by "great content." Surely a website can produce helpful content but still have trouble getting seen. Just given the nature of how cluttered online traffic can be, it can be very helpful to engage in SEO. Are you saying smaller companies who apply as much back linking or keyword repetition as possible could be penalized? By the language of your post it seems the main companies that will be hurt by this are larger ones with the budget to artificially inflate their results.

Orange County SEO

Orange County SEO

Over Optimization

Isn't the update targeting websites that produce spam-like content, but are good at SEO to get their websites to show up on the first page? We all experienced this before. It only takes a few seconds to scan through a website to realize that they aren't offering the information you were looking for, yet they optimized their site for the keywords.

Join the conversation!

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
Are you human? Please answer this question to help us prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

MarketPlace

Boost Customer Satisfaction & Loyalty at SCORE 2013

[May 29-31, Boston] Customer experience management (CEM) strategy meets customer operations at SCORE Conference 2013. Topics include driving customer satisfaction and loyalty, employee engagement, customer retention, call center technology and big data analytics. CustomerThink members save $700 off the regular registration fee.

Digital vs. Human Banking Experiences: Can This Be a Happy Marriage?

[June 6] It's time for banking leaders to rethink how to nurture and grow customer relationships in an increasingly digital world. Get the results of a new study that revealed the CX practices of top performing banks. Learn how digital Innovations can enable more personal service.

eMetrics Summit

[June 10-13, Chicago] If you are responsible for the results of your company’s website, social media, ecommerce, web intelligence, data strategy, audience research and/or measurement, then mark your calendar. Customerthink members save 15% off full conference passes with code CTKTO15.

Predictive Analytics World

[June 10-13, Chicago] PAW's program will feature over 40 sessions with case studies so you can witness how predictive analytics is applied at leading enterprises. Customerthink members save 15% off full conference passes with code CTKTO15.

Confirmit’s Community Conference ’13 – London and Las Vegas

[June 19-21, London; June 26-28, Las Vegas] Attending CCC ‘13 gives you an unrivaled opportunity to understand and address rapid industry changes and discover new techniques that can drive your business forward. Create a tailored agenda that explains how to overcome the challenges your business faces. Take advantage of excellent networking opportunities and face-to-face discussions with thought leaders.

Global Customer Experience Management (CEM) Certification Program

[Sept 19-20, Amsterdam; Sept 24-25, Sao Paulo; Nov 12-13, San Francisco] An internationally recognized program with proven track record of success - being run for 40 times in 17 cities with attendees from 58 countries, the program is developed based on the U.S. patent-pending Branded CEM Method which aims to drive customer loyalty and brand differentiation with quantifiable business results. Limited offer: USD300 early bird discount.

Customer Experience Certification

[Sept 24-26, London] If you’re developing a customer experience program or want to review your current approach, join other customer experience leaders for this intensive 2.5-day certification. Presented by Medallia, the global leader in customer experience management. Enter code ‘Cthink’ to save$300/£200.

Voice of Customer 2.0: Creating Change Your Customers and Employees Can Believe In

[Recorded April 25] Despite good intentions, in the majority of companies Voice of Customer programs contribute little to business success. Join us to learn the secrets to capitalize on Customer Experience feedback, so you can drive organization actions that will unlock profitable growth.

Get your event or resource listed in the MarketPlace, reaching 200,000 business leaders monthly.
For more information, contact CustomerThink advertising sales.