Why is this spammy tactic working?
-
We've recently taken over this account and are baffled how the previous SEO company has been attaining rankings. Why in the world is this spammy tactic still working in this day and age?
This is one of many landing pages on the website consisting of an iframe of the home page and a hidden article. The page had a ton of spammy incoming links with spammy anchor text from horribly spammy blog posts.
-
Thanks Christy!
Glad i'm becoming a useful part of the group. It's tough questions every day. I love that.
-
I second what EGOL said, Ed! high-fives
-
I guess it will remain a mystery. I'm just surprised to see people using this tactic right now when so many websites have been wiped off the net doing this stuff.
-
There's just too many things it could be and I'd also be scratching my head. Maybe I'm getting paranoid listening to conspiracy theorists but sometimes things seem to be intentionally obscured so there is always ambiguity about the workings of the system.
It's enough to drive you insane but whenever in doubt just turn to thinking up a great new topic and writing a great new article that people will want to read and engage with and that might earn some decent backlinks. I swear if I spent as much time doing that as I do trying to reverse-engineer the algorithm then I'd be lots happier and more successful
There was a person last night from a major price comparison site here in the UK with a very good reputation. She told me that they had been engaging in successful black hat tactics until very recently. Like April 17th 2018 or around the time of 'Fred'
She said she was terrified to move because it felt like a house of cards about to collapse. I just didn't know what to tell her. It's the same here. What is your clients view of it? Do they accept responsibility for the shaky foundations? Have you discussed the position they're in? I'd get them to agree a strategy and make sure it involves the risk of losing rankings in the name of clearing the decks for future development and nail the financial risks associated with a drop in traffic.
-
The SEO company definitely did the client a favor by taking the links down; I'm just scratching my head that these pages were ever able to rank, given the recency of their creation.
-
Yikes.
Check this out. It's a poll on Barry Schwartz' site. They have some more grey and black hat peeps over there (especially in the comments) and they are saying that huge numbers of dodgy backlinks aren't affecting them at all. I really believe backlinks are becoming less and less important unless they are really powerful and relevant ones. It's almost like Google is ignoring this whole swathe of bad sites and the algorithm just doesn't take a blind bit of notice. But when a real person does a quality survey then this type of thing:
- Automatically generated content
- Participating in link schemes
- Creating pages with little or no original content
- Cloaking
- Sneaky redirects
- Hidden text or links
- Doorway pages
- Scraped content
- Participating in affiliate programs without adding sufficient value
- Loading pages with irrelevant keywords
- Creating pages with malicious behavior, such as phishing or installing viruses, trojans, or other badware
- Abusing rich snippets markup
- Sending automated queries to Google
is going to get you a penalty. (I pasted them straight over from google)
-
Hey EGOL,
thanks so much. I really enjoy the community. And answering the questions helps me learn more because there's never a right answer and it encourages me to be creative and think about my own site. Also I want the T-shirt lol!!
I just came back from the SEM rush conference in London and was doing a Q&A for in-house users of their product. It's amazing how much has changed really recently. I'd be genuinely afraid that if I stopped engaging I'd miss something! We have 32,000 users to our site now. Pretty much all my learning has been from Whiteboard Fridays and Moz blogs. I love the way this forum is never about gaming google like some others. It's all whiter than white hat. That's the future of SEO. There will be no black hats in a few years. It's going to be impossible to compete.
Thanks for the vote of confidence. I must have read about 100 of your responses on here. You're prolific. Are you from the UK? It's Brighton SEO tomorrow?
-
Thank you for your thoughtful feedback. The ironic thing is this website is actually relatively new - I believe it was created in fall of 2017. The previous seo company took down all the back links to these pages, but here is a sample to give you an idea what kind of junk was linking in. (All the backlinks looked like this). http://wadoptc.com/?How-To-Create-A-Business-By-Selling-Socks-Online-1068914.html
-
Hi Ed,
You have been giving a lot of great responses in Q&A. They are very generous and high quality.
I just want to thank you for the help that you are providing and encourage you to keep up the great work!
Cheers!
-
I've just come back from a forum where we were discussing this exact thing. It was suggested that older sites can have a multitude of sins and google will overlook them or ignore them until a big event (such as an https switchover) where google take a closer and more comprehensive look at the site and it's pages and backlinks.
A few people said that they were not immediately hit by panda and penguin type issues until they did some big event on the site and it came under scrutiny from google.
This was only anecdotal stuff but I see tons of sites with legacy black hat and grey hat SEO that are still ranking and seem to be doing ok. It was also suggested that links are just less important these days and so long as the page is getting good implicit user feedback signals like time on page, users clicking around and engaging with content then things hold out for longer.
Just like it takes time to get a pages authority and position up it also takes time for it to diminish. So in the long term you need to correct these issues or you'll gradually (or sometimes quickly) get either a penalty or an algorithmic suppression of your page.
Newer pages will never get ranked with this type of profile and the standards for indexing newer pages are much higher now. So just because it's not causing problems now doesn't mean you don't need to get it fixed or at least start adding pages that are in line with the latest stricter quality guidelines.
Hope this helps. I know it's not really an 'answer' because it's a very tricky issue. I can see how these ideas make sense though. If you were doing things that used to be ok and now are not ok, google is going to be less likely to hammer you like if you tried to launch a brand new site using clearly banned practices.
-
Well, it works. According to the spam spam analysis, they are at level 3 of 17. You can see it yourself here:
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
-
Star snippet not work
Hi I write a json+ld script for star snippet in my website but not work in my first page. you can see it in this URL https://www.alibaba.ir when I googled my keyword "بلیط هواپیما" my competitor show with star snippet in SERP but my site doesn't show.
On-Page Optimization | | tohidpolymer4 -
Your tactics on improving organic search for a site in a struggling industry
We work with a client of ours with organic search initiatives. The problem is: the industry (e.g. the core of the business) is sagging. It has been for a couple of years. And they're finally feeling these sagging losses. Google Trends support this and shows it quite nicely. It pretty much mirrors organic search referrals as well. The industry (e.g. the core phrase that the company and its competitors have historically hit very hard) as well as Google Trends for the client (middle of the pack) and their two big competitors are attached. Wondering if anyone else has had this type of circumstance with their clients and some of their go to tactics that helped them stop the skid (and even make it start going up). Thanks SpztkvF.png LPHGo76.png
On-Page Optimization | | ChristianMKG0 -
Which one of them works better?
Hello everybody, As I need to improve the title tags of the site I manage, I was wondering which one between the hyphen (-) and the the vertical bar (|) when writing title tags?
On-Page Optimization | | PremioOscar0 -
What are your top tactics for boosting your site's Author Rank?
Mike Arneson has an excellent Mozinar where he shares some helpful Author Rank tactics. What specific tactics are you doing to boost the Author Rank of your site?
On-Page Optimization | | ProjectLabs1 -
How To Get GD Star Rating working in wordpress categories.
I want to use GD star rating so that stars show up in SERPS for my category pages. I've installed the plugin but can't see how to do it. Does anyone have any idea?
On-Page Optimization | | SamCUK0 -
"City page" links in footer of home page: Spammy?
Is listing a bunch of links to city pages in the footer of a home page considered "spammy" to Google? (ie- Chicago Alarms, Illinois Alarms, Naperville Alarms, etc.) What are the negative affects this might have on ranking, if any?
On-Page Optimization | | MChi0 -
Wordpress category links not working
Hi All of sudden, my category links are not working. Any tips on figuring out what's causing this? Looks like permalink problem with newer wordpress version. I turned off all the plugins see if this cause any problems. Still not being able to find any option. Here's my site http://www.hibebefetaldoppler.com/fetal-doppler-questions-and-answers/ Thanks in advance
On-Page Optimization | | BistosAmerica0 -
Spammy keywords on a page
My client's website has a box of text on each page that is spammy and horrible to read and stuffed with keywords. The text boxes are there only for search engines as they mean nothing to humans. I say remove them as it must be doing more harm than good. However, my client is scared to remove them as the text has been there on each page for ten years and he is worried about a drop in visitor numbers if they are removed. Is he right to be worried?
On-Page Optimization | | mascotmike0