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The Dirty Tricks that Google Miss.

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In doing some research, I have found a competitor who using some linking tricks to get a number one ranking. They are achieving “Google recognised” links to their site. There is no debate that it works – the results are in the ranking. It’s whether is moral, ethical or if the process will stand the test of time.

I will show you what the site has done and rather than point out the site. I will cover the process they have used to rank high on many keywords. (over 900 focused terms)

1. The developed a list of core keywords – these are in demand competitive “money” keywords which many advertisers are spending large amounts of money to buy on Adwords. These are product words like “hair dryer” that searches may be looking to buy.

2. Used blogs back links – The blogs they have used are a specific type on diverse subjects with no set theme or idea which by the way, blows away the myth that you need links from sites in your same market eg: if you are selling dog toys – you need links from other “dog theme” site – never was true but at least this is proof.

Here is an example of the type of pages they are on:

http://nana.english.tw/post/709/1922

(Link opens a new window)

3. Research – Most reputable blogs have a comment system allow others to make a comment, or statement about the information (see more info below) This allows users to interact and at the same time, create regular updated information, bringing the Google search spider back to your site, so it’s a win-win.

In most Blogs 2 things happen when someone posts a comment:

1) The blog owner gets an email notification before the link is confirmed.

2) When the link is placed, the link has a setting placed on it called “No Follow” tag.

This means that Google will follow it to find pages, however it will not count it as link to your site. It will not pass any type of reputation on that will help your rank.

More on the no follow Tag here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nofollow

(Link opens a new window)

This is contrary to what is said in some software out there which allows to post comments to thousands of blogs (blog spamming)  – Buyer beware – it doesnt work! Most blogs have this set to protect themselves.

The blogs there are using do not have these settings turned on and look like they are old blogs that have been abandoned. Looking at a view of them, is that the blogs have a lot of incoming links in place and therefore have a good page rank in some cases.

Also there are others blogs which don’t have page rank but have appeared in Google

To check what links Google sees on any site use this in the Google search box:

link:http://www.sitename.com

I am guessing the company that done this may be Chinese as a lot of the blogs that link to the site are in Chinese and need to be translated.

Here’s the main point of this article- it does in fact work and maybe your competition is doing it do it is called comment spamming.

Due to Google saying over the years, that you cannot be punished for others who link to you ( That way your competition can’t link to your site do you harm) The only way that the results can be changed is to create more quality links to your site.

You can contact Google (like I did BTW at abuse@google.com ) however its unlikely to change things. They may decide to hand edit the results by removing the site, but this is unlikely.

So where does this go? Is it the responsibility of the owner of the blog to set it up correctly? Or is the moral ground being used by the person posting the link? Thoughts?

I would love to get your feedback

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13 Responses to “The Dirty Tricks that Google Miss.”

  1. admin says:

    Thank you all for your comments- I will do my best to help :)

    The Term “Page rank”- is a term that Google uses in its system of reputation – its not the rank of where your site comes up in the search results.

    I will be doing a report on page rank and making it available soon- get a top 10 ranking is not all about page rank(its only 1 element)

    Luke- you are right, it is similar. I believe many sites that may have used guestbooks a few years ago are most likely not around any more, like the FFA (free for all) link pages concept which has been abused and does not work.

    I believe this idea will fade too over time

    Next week I will be starting on the questions that have been asked- answering them in detail

  2. Chas says:

    I’d like to say you came up with good “Proof” but you didn’t. PROOF would be 2 websites, one with “themed” links, and one without.

    Plus the “Theme” of a link, comes greatly from the page title of the sending page. NOT the entire website. “Getting links from a related website” was never and issue. Getting links from a related PAGE was always an issue. Google doesn’t rank websites. Just individual pages. Granted, websites tend to function as a unit due to internal linking.

    But getting themed links from similar themed PAGES has always been very powerful, and proven.

    Just getting a link from somebody’s link page is not.

  3. Mujtaba says:

    Hi,
    The site owners tell that he uses these given tricks,
    http://www.funcity.co.cc

  4. admin says:

    Hi Chas,
    Thank you for your feedback

    Re:”Just getting a link from somebody’s link page is not”

    I agree I have not compared 2 sites with similar rankings to see if one with a themed link is ranked higher.

    I site I looked over, which has a number 1 ranking has done exactly what you have said above- got a link from anybody- its sheer number (28 K) come from 100% unrelated sites(blogs) most not even in english.

    best regards
    Paul

  5. Hi Paul,

    Thanks for the information. It is interesting, and challenging, to keep up with the constant changes with google and different “tactics.”

    I ran across this software a couple days ago that is designed to help you ferret out only blogs that don’t use the “nofollow.” Actually it lists them all for your keywords, but shows which are “dofollow” and which are “nofollow.”

    There’s a free trial version… I downloaded it but confess I have’t fired it up yet but I do plan to soon.

    You can get the trial version here:
    http://RemarkableResources.com/Go/FastBlogFinder

    Could be a useful tool if used RESPONSIBLY and not to blast spammy comments.

    I look forward to your PR report!

    ~Z

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