Bytestart - The online small business portal
Search over 1500 Articles!


SEO Startup - Create and manage your own professional website and use the Search Engine Optimisation features to get your site noticed by Google. All for just £200 + VAT Click here to find out more.


Google Ban - How not to get banned by Google!

 print  e-mail 

Given that Google now provides over 70% of all Internet search traffic, the last possible thing any small business site owner would want is to be banned from the Google index!

With countless search engine marketing techniques being employed these days, and contrasting advice available all over the web, it is well worth ensuring that you do not 'over optimise' your site or use any techniques which will result in Google penalising your site (see this story on poor old BMW!).

Although the main rule would be to create a site which caters for your audience, provides quality content and contains meta information which is faithful to your site content, you should always optimise your site code to aid in your search ranking efforts, but this should be done in moderation, and in line with the following tips.

Spam

Never, ever spam. This involves sending a large amount of unsolicited mail via your domain mail server. Although the legality of mass mailing is a grey area, sites which do this deserve to be banned by every search engine.

Link Farming

Link Farms, or Free-for-all links pages exist solely to help listed sites gain higher search engine rankings. These are bad neighbourhoods and are frowned upon by the major search engines. Obviously you can't control which sites link back to you, but you can ensure you don't link to link farms.

Excessive Links

Now that so many webmasters are more obsessed with their Google Pagerank than the amount of quality traffic they receive, link pages are fuller than ever. You should try not to place too many outbound links on a single page. If you do need to link to 100 or more sites, place the links on separate pages.

Cloaking

Seen by many SEO specialists as probably the thing most likely to result in a Google ban, cloaking involves creating one page designed specifically for the search engines, and another which will appear for the user. This is search engine manipulation at its worst.

Selling PageRank

Some sites have gone so far as to sell PageRank - i.e. selling links on highly ranked pages. You can sell links (i.e. advertising), but you cannot sell links for the stated purpose of increasing Google Pagerank.

Doorway Pages

A few years back, doorway (or gateway) pages were as common as normal pages - these are usually small pages, crammed full of keywords, designed solely for the purpose of gaining high rankings. They usually look awful and a site which uses a lot of doorway pages is likely to be penalised.

Excessive Cross-Linking

Some webmasters create multiple site, often with identical or similar content. They are then heavily linked together with the sole purpose of increasing Pagerank. Not recommended. If you have several sites, inter-linking is fine, but in moderation as with all search engine marketing techniques.

Submitting multiple URL's from the same site

An example would be for a webmaster to submit mysite.com and mysite.com/index.html to the Google database, thereby essentially trying to get two search results for the same page. If Google doesn't find a new site quickly anway, just submit your index page ONCE!

SEO Software

Don't use unauthorised computer programs to submit pages, check rankings, etc. Such programs consume computing resources and violate Google's terms of service. Google does not recommend the use of products that send automatic or programmatic queries to Google.

If you follow these guidelines and steer clear of excessive search engine marketing techniques, you should be fine. Just remember to create a site with is faithful to the product or service you are providing information on and you should be fine. Concentrate on exchanging quality links with similar sites and don't get too obsessed with your Google Pagerank. Quality, returning traffic is the goal.

For Google's webmaster guidelines, visit http://www.google.com/webmasters/guidelines.html.

Posted February 6, 2006





Latest articles in Google Tips
 
Google Sandbox - new sites taking ages to get hits!
[March 24, 2006] Much has been written about the Google "Sandbox" theory, wherby new sites take many months before they receive search engine referrals. Some thoughts on this theory and links to further reading
 
Google manipulates search results: A boost for small business?
[March 11, 2006] Getting a Top 10 ranking in Google's search results is becoming harder by the day, especially for small businesses with limited budgets. But if a Top 10 ranking for your major keywords has eluded you so far, there may be hope for you.
 
Google Ban - How not to get banned by Google!
[February 6, 2006] Given that Google now provides over 70% of all Internet search traffic, the last possible thing any small business site owner would want is to be banned from the Google index!
 
BMW banned by Google for dubious SEO techniques!
[February 6, 2006] With so many small businesses now reliant on Google for a large chunk of their online traffic, the news that Google appears to have banned the German BMW site from its search results for dubious search engine marketing techniques just goes to show how important it is not to push your luck too far when trying to get high ranking for your keywords.
 
The sparring and spin of the Google dance
[December 21, 2005] The Guardian reports on how unscrupulous firms are manipulating world's leading search engine
 
SEO Duplicate Web Content Penalty Myth Exploded
[December 1, 2005] Discussion of the myth that search engines will penalise a site if much of its content is also on other websites.
 
Under the thumb of Google's Jagger Update
[October 20, 2005] As many of our newsletter subscribers and visitors take a keen interest in search engine ranking changes, I thought I'd write a few words about Google's latest update, nicknamed "Jagger".
 
“Google bombing” and what it can teach us about search engine optimisation
[September 29, 2005] Google bombing involves creating links to a certain page using the target keyword in the link. This is a legitimate method to use to improve search engine rankings, even if it is a method abused by the Google-bombers.
 
What is the Google Dance?
[August 31, 2005] Google is so critical to most site’s search optimisation process that entire sites have been set up purely to analyse how often, and precisely how Google updates its search results each month or so.
 
How long since Google updated Pagerank?
[August 22, 2005] According to one of our favourite web marketing tools (Page Rank Update List History), Google hasn't updates its 'Pagerank' or backlinks for 83 days.
 
 










Blue Egg Ecommerce
Web Design, search engine optimisation service, ecommerce solutions and emarketing specialists.



Free Bytestart News feeds