Turn grey myself or rat on black hat competitors?
-
When being trashed by a less than white competitor what do you find most effective:
- lie down with your feet in the air considering a career in gardening?
- turn grey yourself?
- rat on them to Google?
Phil
-
I always try to work with some white hat techniques to run my campaign of SEO on my new blog.
-
Who wins the race or the overall career?
-
I agree with you 100%
This is what you have to do in the financial industry or you will never get anywhere. Many of our major clients have a very ethical site and a rinse and repeat site I like to call them. This is the only way anymore.
Have a great day and a happy holiday.
MB
-
Andy Any tips beside content content and content any other tips for white had,also have u not done any sort of submission at all anywhere?
-
Well said sir.
-
Russ right now I would high five you. I agree 100% with you.
-
You can turn grey but use good original content (don't pollute the internet). Most blackhatters use automatically spun content which is gibberish then submit with automation tools.
{Set yourself a bit more time to create decent handspun content to use with the same automation tools and you will be beating them at their own game.|If you take the time to hand spin some original and quality content, then use those same tools to submit your content you have the ability to beat them with their own tactics.}
-
Google used to care if you told them about garbage sites.
I never used that against my competitors, but only on blatant spam,
then just over 2 years ago, google stopped listening to my reports.
The spam don't only stay there, it got worse.
After 3 months of them ignoring every request, I gave up reporting them.
-
It's good to hear that it's possible to beat quantity with quality ..any example's would be much appreciated!!!
-
What Russ is talking about here is spot on. If you're not using "micro-sites" to test and rank you're not going to be able to keep up with the other guys. How are you going to test new methods and learn if you're scared you might enter a "gray" area with google? Technically, ANY manipulation of Google by manually building links elsewhere is "gray". SEO, in a sense, is inherently "gray". So, to claim that your SEO tactics are 100% white-hat is a challenging statement to defend.
-
Come on, lets be honest for a sec, most SEOs are in the grayhat area - as essentially linkbuilding is a greyhat practice.
If you are getting links any other way than by creating great content on your site then you are involved in some shade of grey.
ethics has nothing to do with being blackhat, whitehat or greyhat - the only ethics involved is being honest to your clients, and letting them know the full scope of risk for various tactics - if a cleint requests blackhat techniques then I will provide them but only after explaining the risks and putting in place risk mitigation strategies - such as mutliple sites as mentioned above
-
a good tactic, you can also use these satellites as link laundries. You can indulge all your black and grey hat whims with the disposable sites - because being naughty is just more fun.
The sites that don't get blasted by Google can then be used to dominate the serps and link to your main website (be sure to keep your client's main sites as well as your own whitehat only - it is just plain wrong to use clients as guinea pigs).
I call this technique building a link mountain - the higher it get the whiter it is at the top - but the bottom may be black as obsidian
-
Don't go grey. Don't rat either because it won't do any good unless many others do the same. Google seems to ignore the one-off requests.
Maybe a bit off topic, but I think the bigger problem here is that Search Engines don't reward White Hat practitioners as quickly as they do the Black & Grey Hatters. The latter sees immediate results by manipulating the system and the penalties are not assessed until week, months or even years afterwards.
Search Engines have made such great strides in many areas but are still lacking in the penalty department.
With search becoming more social, I don't see how SEO and reputation can't do the same. Search Engines should use cues to help trust websites by having developers, designers and SEO's alike "sign" their work. They can attach these sites to their profiles or add a personalized meta tag signature. Having these tags could help Search Engines fight spammy techniques and even offer up suggestions to improve the sites on a more personalized level, without calling anyone out. They can penalize while educating.
-
Great reply!!!
-
Are we talking spam automated links, paid links, or something else?
If it's spam auto links - they'll get banned sooner or later.
If it's paid - read up on how to minimize the risk and jump in. Intermediate sites are one approach.
If it's paid - point out the risks of penalties to people selling the links. "OMG, my site can be banned. No wayyyyyy! Why didn't they say so! Nofollow!"
-
Can you point out to me a single commercial site, non-fortune 500, ranking in the top 10 for credit cards, mesothelioma, poker, or mortgage that is using solely white hat strategies? Go look at their anchor text profile. Those exact match anchor text links are paid, buddy. One right after the other.
-
Yeah it's annoying that... if Google really do want to discourage bad practise why don't they act on the spam reports. Maybe not all of them but the blatant spam with keywords stuffed all over the place and a million links from spamming forums, etc... by not doing anything about it when somebody is frustrated enough to actually bother to fill in a spam report, just makes that person then decide that what the dodgy site is doing works better... the old "if you can't beat them, join them".
Then, like the OP, other SEO's start to think, well why am I sat here slaving away to get anywhere for this client who's putting me under pressure for faster results, when that guy just used xrumer, etc... Maybe I ought to give that a try.
G are shooting themselves in the foot. I've "experimented" in darker head-wear realms a lot for that very reason, not because I want to, but because I'm driven to by G's inaction on the matter.
-
Don't get me wrong - We've done both!
Creating satellite assets proved to me a nightmare for us on so many levels it's not funny. From using up resources, splitting up time for creating links across multiple sites to client complaining about the look and feel of all these microsites (they treat them as any other site). I've abandoned the method soon after that and put our resources in link, bait, content and whitehat link building. It gave us the results we needed.
To be fair I recognise some promotional items operators in Australia who have done microsites really well and benefit from it, however most of them have "fed" juice through the main corporate site. To me this is too close to a scheme for comfort.
Another point (this time against the method) is that you're missing out on branding and effectively creating natural links to microsites. If we look at all big brands, their microsites are campaign based. not designed to attract SEO traffic, that's the job of the main site.
-
So here's a silly thought... Why not build all sites with White hat content and techniques that we know work, and then see who wins?
Look, at the end of the day, there are those that are successful (very) following all guidelines to a tee, have nothing but a string of successes without ever having to tread on territory that comes even close to unethical.
There simply is no need. I am not going to deny that there are black hat techniques that work and might not get found, but why would you take that chance when there is a White hat way of achieving the same results? Results that are going to continue to pay long term.
-
You still think that I am talking about the client's primary site.
Look, leave the main site alone - do it all white hat with great content and great links. I am totally on board with that.
Buy why not build 3 other sites and use the techniques that work NOW on them? Seriously, can you give me one strong reason why a webmaster should continue to stand by while Google's algorithm's can't keep up with his competitor's spam?
You keep running the race with 1 horse, and Ill keep running it with 20. We will see who wins.
-
Seo's that take risks with their customers websites have a number of lessons yet to learn. It's like taking your car to the garage and have someone say "let's see what happens when we try a lesser quality petrol into something that is supposed to take premium" Seo's that are successful are those that can deliver measurable results without putting their customers in danger. It's called good business practice.
-
I just disagree with you. Even at the #1 position, you are missing out on 50+% of the available organic traffic for that keyword. Multi-site strategies are always the right way to go. Seriously, if you really believe that paid linking and black hat link building are dangerous to your and your client's sites, then why in the hell would you have only 1 property that is easily susceptible to a client buying links to and spamming?
-
Successful SEO's thrive on those who are afraid of taking risks.
-
lol great response Russ. Attack those blackhats with fire!
-
Absolutely 100% white - no shades of grey at all
All of my customer sites are SEO'd to match the Google guidelines and don't go close to anything that be classed as remotely grey (or black).
The things I find make the biggest difference, outside of ensuring the site is up to scratch, is the content. Being a copywriter, I often write entire knowledge bases for customer sites so they have a lot of unique content to share with their customers, via social media sites, to have mentioned in articles, for other sites to link to... the list goes on.
Part of this is down to the fact it is not written for the search engines, but very strong written words for visitors.
Many wont understand just what a difference this can make - coupled with a well put together site = good results.
Regards,
Andy
-
Thanks for your rallying words Andy. I am feeling the squeeze and clearly I am struggling in sustaining faith whilst facing the cloaked and the paid. But ok, it's do-able. When you say never black nor grey I presume you mean really 100% white, entirely within the meaning of Google tos. Not even a shade of grey and it's possible to beat really good black hat? Uh oh there I go again!
-
I have to say that for myself, I would never go anywhere close to black hat (or grey) with a website belonging to a customer. There is too much at stake, including my own reputation!
it is more than possible to achieve great results with the right know how - my largest customer has more than 80,000 pages - of these, about 90% of them are on the 1st page for their targeted keywords - of that 90%, about 70% are in the top 2-3.
Trust me, it is more than do-able
Regards,
Andy
-
Ok, got it.
It's in my diary - 16th March 2014. Cheers!
-
Good questions...
1. How is the 2nd Site Used? The second, third, fourth and so on sites are wholly separate from your first and are used to test gray and black-hat strategies - whether they be paid links, forum profile links, article syndication, directories, comment spam, whatever.
2. What do you do in 3 years...? Let me ask you a counter question. What are you going to do in 3 years when you aren't making any money from your primary site because, like the last 15 years of Google's existence, they still don't have full control over gray and black hat strategies to allow your white hat strategies to work? I'll tell you exactly what you are going to do.
- You are going to laugh your way to the bank while intelligently continuing to reinvest the majority of your profits in your white-hat property.
- You are going to use the knowledge you learned about what links work, what keywords are easier to rank for, etc. to improve your white hat site.
- You are going to suffocate your competitors out of the SERPs as they find it harder and harder to compete against your niche-empire.
- You are going to look back on today and say, hey, that russ guy is fricken awesome. I should buy him a beer. Then you are going to call me up, and I am going to think it is totally weird, but I am a sucker for beer.
-
Phew, your guarantee is reassuring. And yes, I know I need to be creative and this may involve a little grey. I feel my SEO education is reaching a point where I understand that there's no such thing as pure white but just staying as clean as you can while achieving results. I very much appreciate your offer and would love some pointers but I am very wary of identifying my problem specifically because I suspect the SEOs trashing me are very well known around these parts. And although their link building involves grey and black it is also terrifyingly awesome: http://www.seomoz.org/q/40-000-high-value-links-sold
-
Unfortunately my clients are having a problem with patience and I am having a hard time justifying #4. As I up my SEO game I am even having a hard time believing it myself. Using tools such as OSE I am seeing ever more data that belies this route. It's a murky old world.
Maybe I really should consider gardening. Although it gets a bit cold around here in winter.
-
Hey Russ, I'm from a development background so I can knock together a site no problem but I am unclear of the SEO benefit of your suggestion. How is the 2nd site used? Do you mean to use it entirely seperate and unrelated to the main site (ie a sacraficial lamb)? This being the case what do you do in 3 years when the second site, using black hat, has become your main site by sheer numbers (and you have a house built of straw)? I suspect I do not understand what you mean.
-
Haha... Google hates this. I admit though... it's worth a shot. However starting on a new test site is just a messy temporary measure and spend of valuable time and money when both are limited.
-
Reporting them to Google will likely only help feed and improve their algorithm and not directly affect the competitor (unless they get audited manually). Turn grey? What is grey is a very grey question... buying links from known sellers and spammy websites as well as spamming yourself is not a long term solution. Doing something clever, that's a different story for as long as you don't push it too far. Gardening actually sounds nice... lol
Seriously though, I can guarantee you that it's possible to beat quantities with quality so keep that creative hat on and work on those link opportunities.
I'm happy to answer specific questions on link building ideas if I get to know a bit more about your situation / industry.
-
Create new sites, copy their tactics, try out new ones. Ratting to Google will almost never work (too many fish to fry). Seriously, if something is working but is too black-hat for your main property, create another property. You can get a gorgeous wordpress theme for $35, get web hosting for $5/mo and register a new domain for $10, and get 9 articles of content written over at text broker for $5 bucks a pop. Now you have a website up and running for $100 on a new IP address ready to do whatever you want.
Churn and burn. Churn. and. Burn.
-
I was never much of a gardener.
4. Work hard the right way. Have patience.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Negative SEO - Spammy Backlinks By Competitor
Hi Everyone, Someone has generated more than 22k spam backlinks (on bad keywords) for my domain.Will it hurt on my website (SEO Ranking)? Because it is already in the top ranking. How could I remove all the spammy backlinks? How could I know particular competitior who have done this?
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | HuptechWebseo0 -
Competitor Black Hat Link Building?
Hello big-brained Moz folks, We recently used Open Site Explorer to compile a list of inbound linking domains to one of our clients, alongside domains linking to a major competitor. This competitor, APBSpeakers.com, is dominating the search results with many #1 rankings for highly competitive phrases, even though their onsite SEO is downright weak. This competitor also has exponentially more links(602k vs. 2.4k) and way more content(indexed pages) reported than any of their competitors, which seems physically impossible to me. Linking root domains are shown as 667 compared to 170 for our client, who has been in business for 10+ years. Taking matters a step further, linking domains for this competitor include such authoritative domains as: Cnn.com TheGuardian.com PBS.org HuffingtonPost.com LATimes.com Time.com CBSNews.com NBCNews.com Princeton.edu People.com Sure, I can see getting a few high profile linking domains but the above seems HIGHLY suspicious to me. Upon further review, I searched CNN, The Guardian and PBS for all variations of this competitors name and domain name and found no immediate mentions of their name. I smell a rat and I suspect APB is using some sort behind-the-scenes programming to make these "links" happen, but I have no idea how. If this isn't the case, they must have a dedicated PR person with EXTREMELY strong connections to secure this links, but even this seems like a stretch. It's conceivable that APB is posting comments on all of the above sites, along with links, however, I was under the impression that all such posts were NoFollow and carried no link juice. Also, paid advertisements on the above sites should be NoFollow as well, right? Anyway, we're trying to get to the bottom of this issue and determine what's going on. If you have any thoughts or words of wisdom to help us compete with these seemingly Black Hat SEO tactics, I'd sure love to hear from you. Thanks for your help. I appreciate it very much. Eric
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | EricFish0 -
Competitor Bad Practice SEO Still Ranking Well But Why ?
Moz Friends, A very close competitor have always been challenging for similar competitive keywords. We seem to have the advantage for alot of long tail keywords but on one of the higher traffic relevant keywords they seem to do well. I really struggle to understand why, particularly with the back links they use Just my thoughts and notes on the two: Our Page Better written text content (Maybe slightly written to for experienced target audience but we are working on simplifying things) Good Clear site URL structure and navigation for usability Fresh content updates Mobile optimized Reasonable page speeds Good on-page optimization Good back links from industry influences Competitor Page Negatives Site structure and URL's are inconsistent and messy Lower quality content site wide They use tried and tested on page optimization methods like Keyword spamming, Bold Keywords,Underlining Keywords (Sarcasm) Terrible back links, all directories and free article submission sites (Seriously take a look) Less focused on page optimization Not mobile optimized Most of the rest of the sites carry on the same sort of differences, Engine: www.google.co.uk Keyword: Sound level meters **Our Page: **www.cirrusresearch.co.uk/products/sound-level-meters/ **Competitor Page: **www.pulsarinstruments.com/product-information/Sound-Level-Meter.html Any feedback would be greatly appreciated please, i am really struggling to get my head around this Thanks James
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | Antony_Towle1 -
Better ranking competitors have paid links from blog pages
I have a trial of all the tools at the moment and it's a lot of fun. I have been delving into site explorer and found that some competitors have links to them from obvious seo promoting paid blog sites. One has no other links except a paid for blog from a site that openly admits it offers paid marketing and they shot up to 4th on page one for a main keyword phrase. The info from moz and matt cuts video's say not to do this, but it's so tempting. The blog is well written, while I sit here and do the right thing, my competitors have page one. If the blog is well written and is meaningful is it OK and if google ever decide it's paid and don't like it, wouldn't it be better to be page one for 6 months and then recover? I'd love to give the link to the seo, blogger thingy but don't want to come across as promoting it in any way. I am sure there are loads of them anyway.
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | Peter24680 -
I need Black Hat Examples
So I need a little help. I'm guest lecturing this week for a local college class on web design. We are going to be talking about Black Hat design for a little bit and things to avoid. I'd like to share some examples in the wild of old school tactics, keyword stuffing, cloaking, hidden text. Anyone have any good examples? If you don't want to share them publicly feel free to sent me a private message. I would like to give the students some interesting examples so they can visualize it. Thanks!
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | BCutrer0 -
Here's some more proof white hat SEO works
I guess this is the most logical place to share this with you. I do SEO for many sites. I've recently been focusing on two in particular for the same client. We used Netfirms SEO services to get links--he insisted--which basically consists of writing articles in broken English and placing them all over blog networks with our desired anchor text. On the other site, I simply refused to employ those services. This was the client's main site, and was way too important to mess around with. I built links myself, the legit way. Long story short, for months I watched the shady, black hat site climb and climb in the SERPs, while the white hat one kept falling. This morning, I checked my SEOmoz campaigns and my white hat site went from #8 to #2 and my black hat site went from page 2 to no longer being in the top 50. Just another example of what's been happening with Google lately and how great it is. Interestingly, the black hat site never got a warning in GWT about buying links. Now I just have to figure out a way to break the news to my boss and tell him I told him so without actually using those words.
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | UnderRugSwept5 -
How to get rid of black hat links?
I have recently discovered that one of my clients has either been sabotaged or has done this himself. In the case that he didn't do anything, how do you go about getting rid of bad links? There is now over a 1000 bad links linked to his site, do I report them as spam or what is the best way to fix this?
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | StrategicEdgePartners0 -
Can't figure out how my competitor has so many links
I suspect something possibly black-hat is going on with the amount of inbound links for www.pacificlifestylehomes.com ( http://www.opensiteexplorer.org/links?site=www.pacificlifestylehomes.com ) mainly because they have such a large volume of links (for my industry) with their exact targeted keyword. Can anyone help clear this up for me?
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | theChris0