SEO : Sleepwalking Ever Onwards?
by Alan Perkins:
© 11-January-2005
http://www.silverdisc.co.uk
I was
privileged to be a speaker on the "Black
Hat, White Hat & Lots of Gray" panel
at the recent Chicago Search Engine Strategies
Conference. Unfortunately, a worse than usual
case of jetlag meant that, by the time of the
session, I'd had only 5 hours sleep in the 60
hours since I had left my bed in England. I
felt as though I was sleepwalking and by the
end of the session I didn't feel alone. If those
present were representative of the SEO industry,
then the industry as a whole is sleepwalking
towards disaster.
The idea of the session was
for so-called SEO "White Hats" and
"Black Hats" to make the case for
their approach to SEO in five minutes or less,
then for the audience to ask questions of the
panel.
The first speaker was Jill
Whalen. Jill made the point that real businesses
with real sites never need to use black hat
techniques, and that white hats can achieve
long-term results with less stress. Prior to
the show, Jill wrote an article, "Black
Hat/White Hat", which summarised her
position.
I spoke next. I stressed
the importance of discussing techniques rather
than people. I covered the main differences
between Black Hat Techniques and White Hat Techniques,
which I've summarised later in this article.
I finished with the following contentious points
for discussion:
- That White Hat Techniques are ethical whereas Black Hat Techniques are not
- That Black Hat Techniques are probably illegal, and that there is a slight chance that White Hat techniques are illegal too!
The next speaker was Mikkel
deMib Svendsen. Mikkel showed some hilarious
slides of people wearing hats of various descriptions.
Mikkel went on to draw an analogy between SEO
and war, based on the book "Marketing Warfare"
by Al Ries and Jack Trout.
Next up was Todd Friesen.
Todd took us through various black hat tactics
such as referral log spamming and cloaking.
In summary, Todd stated that one should be aware
of the tactics competitors are using and be
prepared to use the same tactics.
The final speaker was Greg
Boser. Greg suggested that SEM stands for Search
Engine Manipulation. He questioned whether aggressive
search engine manipulation was really bad for
the brand, citing examples of many major companies
that cloak without penalty. Greg finished by
stating that full disclosure to clients of the
tactics being used and the risks being taken
was essential.
The questions then followed:
- Why is affiliate marketing considered black
hat?
- If Google gives geo-ip results, how is that
the same as trying to fool a spider?
- How do you know when you've been banned
by search engines and how do you correct it?
- What's the difference between Yahoo and
Google black hat techniques?
- Is buying links a black hat technique?
- Does Google permit cloaking for Flash? Is
it white/black hat?
- What do the search engines owe the website?
These questions did not really
get to the heart of the issue of selecting an
appropriate SEO technique. This was disappointing.
By focusing on the simple nuts and bolts, the
real opportunity of the session was lost - to
look ahead and see where the SEO industry is
headed on its present course. In retrospect,
I should have spoken more about ethics and law.
The questions were about the topics we covered
on the panel - not about the things that were
left for discussion. So, in this article I will
discuss what I said on the panel. In the following
two articles I will discuss what (given that
I only had five minutes to talk) I left unsaid,
hoping to discuss - ethics and law.
My presentation was
only one slide, consisting of the following
table:
| |

Black Hat
|

White Hat
|
| Content and Links |
Search Engines |
Humans |
| Visibility to Humans |
Hidden |
Visible |
| Quality of Work |
Hidden |
Visible |
| Search Engines |
Enemies |
Nothing/Friends |
| Domains/Brands |
Disposable |
Cherished, Primary Domain |
| Site & Relevance |
Apparently Improved |
Actually Improved |
| Results |
Yes, "Short"
Term |
Yes, "Long"
Term |
| Ethical Techniques |
No |
Yes |
| Legal |
No? |
Yes |
This slide summarises the
difference between black hat techniques and
white hat techniques. I'll now elaborate the
differences.
Content, Links and Visibility
When using black hat SEO,
the content on a page and links both on and
to a page are developed for search engines to
see. Humans aren't supposed to see them at all,
and various black hat techniques can be used
to hide them. If humans do see them, their experience
is degraded because for example (as Todd Friesen
demonstrated) the content may be machine generated
garbage. When using white hat techniques, the
content and links are designed for both humans
and search engines to see. This means they must
be at least coherent. The mistake that many
white hat practitioners make is to produce visible
yet ugly pages that don't read well, and therefore
don't convert well.
Quality of Work and Peer
Review
Since black hat practises
are designed to be hidden from humans, the quality
of the work produced by the practitioner is
also hidden to humans. This causes a couple
of problems:
- Clients often can't tell what has been done
on their behalf or in their name
- The work is not open to peer review, so
it would be difficult for professional organisations
to review the quality of the work, too. This
is likely to be more of a problem in future
as the industry evolves.
White hat methods are visible
to humans. Therefore, the quality of the work
can be seen straight away, both by the client
and by peers of the practitioner.
Search Engines - War and
Peace
As
Mikkel said, black hat practitioners tend to
see search engine optimization as a war, and
search engines and SEOs as the enemy.
The white hat approach is
either to ignore search engines altogether,
or to treat search engines in a friendly way.
When I say search engines
can be ignored, I don't mean by SEOs! By definition,
any SEO practitioner is in business because
search engines exist. But white hat techniques
may be used by people who are not SEOs, since
a white hat technique almost always has an alternative
audience. A web designer, information architect,
copywriter or other person may use the same
technique to talk to that alternative audience,
and in the process produce a page that performs
well in search engines, despite the fact that
they are not an SEO practitioner per se.
Most white hat techniques,
then, make sense in the absence of search engines,
whereas black hat techniques have no utility
whatsoever beyond search engines.
Misconceptions about Search
Engines
There is a misconception that
white hat practitioners strictly follow search
engine guidelines. They don't. For example,
I hardly ever read search engine guidelines.
The work that I do makes sense for humans and
that's all I need to know. I may refer to guidelines
if I am doing something that is of no value
to humans. Examples of such activities are setting
up a robots.txt file; the use of meta tags;
and free and paid submission, when appropriate.
There
is also a misconception that search engine guidelines
constitute a "terms of service", and
by not following them one is breaking the TOS.
This is not the case.
Domains and Brands
There
is always a risk that a site will accidentally
or deliberately be removed from a search engine's
index, whether or not SEO is performed on that
site.
Some white hat techniques
can increase this risk. However, other white
hat techniques (such as managing server moves
or mitigating against valid content delivery
techniques being misinterpreted as cloaking)
can actually reduce the risk.
Black hat techniques, by contrast,
will always increase the risk that a site will
be deliberately removed from a search engine's
index. Better black hat practitioners know this,
will warn their clients of the danger and will
have a strategy to cope with that danger. They
may treat domains as disposable items. This
is obviously not a suitable tactic if the work
is being performed under the client's primary
domain. Recently, problems were caused when
Google dropped a number of domains from its
index for using black hat techniques, when those
domains were the primary domains of the clients
of a particular SEO firm. These kinds of cases
don't help to give the SEO industry a good reputation.
A white hat practitioner
will normally work with the client's primary
domain. They may offer a guarantee that the
domain will not be deliberately removed from
a search engine's index as a result of using
their techniques.
Sites and Relevance
When we talk about relevance,
we need to be clear what we are talking about.
Like SEO techniques, relevance is not a black
and white issue. There are lots of shades of
grey.
Any individual person may
say they find a page relevant to a particular
keyword. That doesn't mean that it is among
the most relevant pages on the Web for that
individual or for other individuals. This is
a subjective assessment.
Search engines work at the
group level. To a search engine, every page
in the index is relevant for every possible
keyword. The question is "How relevant?"
A search engine applies algorithms to determine
a relevance score and orders its search results
by that relevance score, most relevant first.
Thus the results at the top of any set of search
results are literally the most relevant. This
is still a subjective assessment, as it is effectively
made by the programmers of the search engine
algorithms. However, as the assessment is made
automatically by the algorithm, according to
pre-determined criteria, there is also an element
of objectivity to it. The function of a search
engine is to deliver search results in response
to keywords that the individual searchers in
its target market find to be relevant - in other
words, for its assessment of relevance t match
its users' assessment.
Search engine algorithms mainly
assess relevance based on the content that people
will see on a page and the links that searchers
will follow, both to and from a page.
When, in response to
a particular keyword, a search engine scores
a page low for relevance and therefore ranks
it lowly, there are two methods for increasing
its score and its ranking:
- To apparently make the page more relevant,
by deceiving the search engine algorithm that
content will be seen on a page when in fact
it won't or that links will be followed to
or from a page when in fact they won't. This
corresponds with black hat techniques.
- To actually make the page more relevant
by changing the content and link structure,
but still using content that people will see
and links that people will follow. This corresponds
with white hat techniques.
Results from Black Hat
and White Hat SEO Techniques
Black
hat SEO techniques may quickly deliver results.
However, due to the disposable nature of the
domains, the results are often short term -
although they can be long term.
White hat SEO techniques can
take some time to implement (although not necessarily)
but their results tend to last for a long time
(although, again, not necessarily).
It's true to say, then, that
both black hat techniques and white hat techniques
can generate both short term and long term results
for clients, whether results are measured in
terms of rankings, traffic, conversion or profit.
However, do the ends always justify the means?
I don't think so. I believe that by continuing
to condone black hat techniques the SEO industry
is setting itself up for failure and sleepwalking
into oblivion. The following two articles, Ethical
Search Engine Optimization Explained and Search
Engine Optimization and The Law, will expand
upon this belief.