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The
Myth of 'Guaranteed #1 Ranking' in Search Engine Marketing
You've
seen the ads: Guaranteed #1 Ranking! There are no guarantees in search engine
marketing and website promotion. If anyone tells you different, you should check
quickly to make sure they don't have their hand in your wallet.
Suppose
you sell widgets. You want to sell more widgets, and the way to do that is to
make sure that more people know about widgets, and that you are the place to
buy their widgets. You might decide to buy a half- page ad in a national magazine
to tell your story. When you place that ad, you are "guaranteed" your
position.
With
a magazine advertisement, you know what the magazine's circulation is, who reads
it, and which page will feature your ad. The magazine can guarantee all that,
because they own the medium.
Search
engine marketing is qualitatively different. When you work with a search engine
marketing firm to promote your website, they cannot guarantee where your listing
will appear. Certainly there are types of online ads where there are guarantees
in place: banner ads priced at "cost per thousand impressions", pop-up
ads, and so forth. These are like traditional media buys, where you are working
directly with the owner of the medium where the ads appear, but this is not
search engine marketing.
Even
so-called pay-per-click search engines cannot guarantee your position. In Google
AdWords, for example, it is not just the price you pay for a given keyword that
determines where you will rank. They also bring in other factors, including
how often your ad is clicked-on, to determine which ad will be listed first.
Just throwing money at them will not necessarily get you into the #1 spot.
The
bottom line is this: search engine marketing professionals do not own the search
engines. They can tell you that you will achieve #1 ranking on a given search
engine, or they can tell you that the moon is made of green cheese, but there
is no way they can make either of those happen.
When
you tell Time magazine you want your ad to be on the back cover, and you pay
them enough money, they will guarantee you the back cover. If you tell your
search engine marketing people you want to be #1 in AllTheWeb, they cannot guarantee
you that result. They can recommend changes to your site that will increase
the likelihood of your ranking higher, but that is a long way from a guarantee.
If
you don't control the medium, you can't guarantee the result. Since your search
engine consultant doesn't control the search engine, there is no way they can
guarantee your position.
The
ranking algorithms of the search engines are a closely-guarded secret. The search
engine wants to give top ranking to the site that is the best match to an individual
visitor's search query, not to the site that was able to "beat" the
system. That is where the value of real search engine marketing comes in.
While
the search engine marketing person cannot guarantee you a position, what they
can do is to apply years of experience to tell you what has worked in the past,
and to help you make it work today. In many ways, "organic" search
engine optimization is really a matter of editing web pages or whole sites to
make them the most search engine friendly they can be. Making sure that a given
page has just the right combination of keywords, title, links, and so on, is
really at its base simply a matter of making that page the best web page it
can possibly be.
The
page that will rank the best in the search engines is also the page that will
make the most sense to the human visitor. Rather than relying on tricks to try
to make the page rank high, it is a matter of just making the page the most
focused and on-message that it can be. The bad news is that this doesn't guarantee
which position in the search engine rankings that page will occupy on a given
day. The good news is that the page will always rank well.
The
search engines change their algorithms from time to time. If today's rule, for
example, is that just the right combination of text in the title tag will make
or break a site, and you know this is true, then all you have to do is to tweak
the title tag to fit within that rule, and you will automatically rank very
high. Today.
Suppose
that tomorrow, however, that rule is changed. Suppose that now the most important
factor that the search engines use to rank a site is the content of the META
Description tag. All the work you went to yesterday to fix the title is now
useless. All of your attention is now focused on fixing that description tag.
Clearly,
over time the focus of the search engines will vary. The best way to deal with
this is to not deal with it! This means that rather than tweaking a site one
way today and another way tomorrow, the best way to approach optimizing a page
or a whole site is to not try to beat the system. Instead of trying to "psych-out"
the search engines, why not add value to the site? A "common sense"
approach to search engine optimization, looking for long term results, is the
way to go. When you try to help a site rank better by making it the best it
can be, everybody wins.
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