Black Hat :(
-
Hello folks!
Name is Mike, i'd like to ask some of you your opinion on this matter.
My company hired an SEO company (reputable company in LA) to get our rankings where we want them to be. They've been somewhat successful, we were actually quite happy with their performance. I do mostly print marketing and graphic design for my company, I do manage our website and online store. As a cost saving measure we've decided to cut their service (expensive) and the SEO is now brought in-house - that means its my responsibility now. By no means am I a complete newbie, I pretty much know what I need to do in order to maintain our rankings and improve as well. And with the knowledgebase here at SEOMOZ i should be fine (i hope).
Thing is that I have asked our previous SEO company to supply a list of all inbound links they created. They've been silent, no response. Am I asking for too much?? I ran some of my links through OpenSite Explorer (great tool by the way) and found tons of incoming links using black hat tactics. I don't see how anybody could benefit making these links but the SEO company who we recently got rid of. I am quite certain they are responsible for these links. Black hat tactics such as keyword stuffing and anchor links (with very small font) on the footer of some random website. Kinda upsets me that we paid so much money for this type of crap. They never offered any advise with respect to on-site SEO which I am now finding out I have a lot of on-site optimizing thank to SEOMOZ.
I don't know if its such a big deal or if am simply overreacting. I am concerned of my company's site getting penalized by the search engines and making my job as in-house SEO much more dificult.
Is this a big deal? Should I ignore it and begin building my own quality links and content?
Thanks
-
At least you are going into this with your eyes wide open. Good luck!
-
Sorry to hear Mike, but glad you're learning SEO on your own so you take take your site in a better direction.
Unfortunately, we've seen a lot of these situations over the past couple of years. Agencies used these methods because they worked for a time, then Google cracked down and 1000s of businesses were left victims of shady SEO.
In most cases, there's not much you can do except move on. You might want to take preemptive measures to try and get those links removed, check Google Webmaster Tools for any penalty messages, and continue building solid, white hat, future proof links.
Best of luck with your SEO.
-
Hi Mike,
Sorry to hear about your troubles. I can relate. Not the company where I'm at, but the company before that chose to go black hat and continues to do so. Just glad I'm not there for the inevitable fall.
Question, have you monitored the source code of all of your pages? I encourage you to audit the source code of every page on your site, just to make sure you haven't been hacked. Look for long lists of links that have been commented out.
One of the sites I did SEO for many years ago was hacked and then the hackers (most likely black hat SEOs) then built link campaigns into our site. It took years to get rid of those irrelevant links. It's a really old tactic but I'm sure there could still be people engaging in this kind of thing. This might not be it at all, just thought I'd suggest you check out your pages.
Good luck!
Dana
-
Thank you for your kind replies vzPRO and Andrea!
I actually just received a reply from the "SEO" company. They're denying that they created those links. I don't believe them. Besides them, there's no reason why anybody else would make those links.
I guess I have my hands full.
Thanks again.
-
Mike, it's a tough situation. It's so important that you are informed about your site and holding an agency (or any partner) accountable is critical. It's tougher once the relationship is over and it is a big deal if you find out you got hosed. It's unfortunate that this wasn't caught earlier.
At the very least, they should be able to give you some sort of overview. I spent most of my career on the agency side and you paid for their services and asking for information on your account isn't out of line, IMHO.
If you can get the data, great, however you know enough to not let it stop you. I mean, if you can hold them accountable, OK, but that won't change your predicament, right?
It sounds like there's plenty of black hat stuff you need to clean up and are smart enough to know to make it a priority before it really hits your site negatively.
And you know for next time -if there is a next time - who not to go to or what to make sure no outside partner does
Good luck!
-
Have you taken a look at your links provided by Google WMT (Webmaster Tools). They will give you a robust list of links coming into your site.
As far as "blackhat" and what not. I wouldn't jump into worrying too much about that (of course be worried but don't go crazy over it) I would definitely start a positive link building campaign. If you dive into the links that Google will provide you on WMT then you'll be able to see the quality of the sites that the links are coming from. The SEO Toolbar we have here is great for determining if the site is worthy of your time or not. Also check out Link Finder on here. It's a great tool and I don't see many people talking about it very often. It's a great place to start.
I would spend about an 80% - 20% time ratio of getting good quality new links vs working to get rid of old links that are "truly" bad for your site.
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
-
Is this considered Black Hat?
So here is the website I’m looking at, it ranks #1 in keywords like used cars for sale billings mt, etc. I was trying to figure out how, because there is no content on the page! I am working on one of our sites to get it to rank better when I found this in my research. #1 http://prntscr.com/aoy0ho So I did a “view page source” to see how many times they’re using keywords and what they’re title and description tags are. #2 http://prntscr.com/aoy0w1 WAIT WHAT…. WHERE IS THIS CONTENT?! #3 http://prntscr.com/aoy13o Then I found it… #4 http://prntscr.com/aoy1e8 #5 http://prntscr.com/aoy1o8 #6 http://prntscr.com/aoy1u1 It doesn’t even read like real content. This has to be considered poor form. I'm not sure why it makes me so angry. What do you guys think?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | rachaelpracht1 -
I am being black hat SEO'd by another company. What should I do?
Hi There, I found out about 6 months ago that I have been getting black hat SEO'd by another company. There are around 350 spammy domains pointing to my home page and product page. I have disavowed a lot of them. Is there anything else I can do? http://bareblends.com.au/ http://bareblends.com.au/the-optimum-9400-blender Thanks!
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Oscarmj0 -
Seo black hat tricks
I have a competitor in the local area. He registered a new domain name. www.orangecountypatentlawfirm.com. It was created back in 11/10 and updated a few months ago on 11/13. My domain is ocpatentlawyer.com. I put my domain and his domain in the open site explorer. The peculiar thing is that my competitors website mirrors identically to my domain. (see attached image) my competitors website rose through the SERP very fast. I never saw it coming. Anyways, I wanted to know if he was using some type of black hat seo trick to hi jack my domain authority to get his own website to rank higher? Plus, if so, does it hurt my ranking? compare.png
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | jamesjd710 -
Advice Needed: Why Is My Site Not Ranking Despite All The White Hat I Have Done?
Hi all, I have tried all white hat ways to make my local business website rank well in Google. We have done: 1.) Good quality content for our site on regular basis
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | chanel27
2.) Submit to Google sitemap
3.) Link in an ethical way
4.) Post on social media sites No Google Panda content farming
No Google Penguin unnatural linking In fact, we have more quality articles to share compared to other laundry dry cleaning websites in Singapore. Can anyone advice me on why my site is my ranking well? Site:
http://www.drycleaning.com.sg0 -
How does a competing website with clearly black hat style SEO tactics, have a far higher domain authority than our website that only uses legitimate link building tactics?
Through SEO Moz link analysis tools, we looked at a competing websites external followed links and discovered a large number of links going to Blog pages with domain authorities in the 90's (their blog page authorities were between 40 and 60), however the single blog post written by this website was exactly the same in every instance and had been posted in August 2011. Some of these blog sites had 160 or so links linking back to this competing website whose domain authority is 49 while ours is 28, their Moz Trust is 5.43 while ours is 5.18. An example of some of the blogs that link to the competing website are: http://advocacy.mit.edu/coulter/blog/?p=13 http://pest-control-termite-inspection.posterous.com/\ However many of these links are "no follow" and yet still show up on Open Site Explorer as some of this competing websites top linking pages. Admittedly, they have 584 linking root domains while we have only 35, but if most of them are the kind of websites posted above, we don't understand how Google is rewarding them with a higher domain authority. Our website is www.anteater.com.au Are these tactics now the only way to get ahead?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Peter.Huxley590 -
Widespread Ranking Drops for Strong, White Hat sites
Hi Moz, A few of our sites experienced widespread ranking drops across all keywords this morning. Both of these are very strong sites with a high DA (56), moz rank and moz trust above 5. We haven't been doing any black hat SEO, creating spammy links, or paying for links. Is anyone else seeing anything similar or have any ideas as to what type of Algorithm update this might be? We currently rank 67th for our name.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | OneClickVentures0 -
I do a lot of on page SEO... I was wondering some basic tactics / strategies for link building? Please provide only WHITE HAT suggestions! Thank You ;)
Please keep in mind google's announcement on links recently.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | entourage2120 -
I tried the directorie list of seomoz, but almost all of them charged for the inclusion. This is a black hat situation?
I need backlinks for my site, and several places inform that directories are a good place. But they charge for the inclusion. Should I pay? This is a blackhat situation where I'm buying for links?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Naghirniac0