There's an element of linkbait to most of what you compose online, and all of that can be viewed as a trick to improve search engine rankings.
But what of the methods - I drank the Kool Aid - that we actively use to promote linkbait for the benefit of search rankings? The things you do to a piece of linkbait with search engine results pages in mind aren't usually for the benefit of humans, and this goes completely against Google's next stipulation that you should ask yourself, "Does this help my users? Would I do this if search engines didn't exist?"
There are a number of things I'd not do if search engines didn't exist, but I may well still create linkbait. I'd be doing it for different purposes, and I wouldn't include legitimate features such as carefully followed and carefully nofollowed links. I'd not waste thirty-five seconds of my life writing a good meta description that no one would ever see. I'd not care where my keywords were placed and I'd probably not even notice if I didn't include any keywords at all on various pages.
An individual piece of linkbait's manipulative qualities can be directly related to its relevance to the site on which it is hosted. I am not including viral marketing campaigns here, but solely attempts to acquire massive numbers of links from one piece of interesting content. In the end, off-topic linkbait's results are much the same as paid link campaigns: a commercial domain goes from zero to hero without having improved its services one bit. However, in linkbait's case, the manipulation and trickery is even worse, because many of the people who give a domain links don't know that they're bolstering its strength and ultimately helping it rank for whatever wares it pushes. The only reason why Google must ignore this is because the linking takes place by choice, using the editorial discretion of the linkers. There is no coercion and no monetary exchange.
Search engines could and most likely do work out which sites have benefited from linkbait: the increase in links would look very similar to that of a badly hidden paid campaign. I realise it's a bit odd for me, a linkbait evangelist if there ever was one, to explain how Google could rationalise punishing or at least discounting linkbait efforts. However, it seems to me that there are a number of aspects of linkbait that aren't ethical in the imaginary world where this page reigns supreme.
It didn't seem that Google ever had much to say about linkbait, aside from that it was an acceptable practice. Quality content was quality content. While a site wouldn't immediately rank first for "cheap airfares" when their linkbait was about presidential candidates' lookalikes, the PageRank a site gained from its bait was fair game. If we are to imagine that Google will crack down on the relevancy of your linkbait in allowing it to gather PageRank, how should they determine relevancy? I am not referring to which search terms your linkbait will help your site rank for, but only the basic domain strength that a large number of links can build. Should this be strictly filtered?
It is also apparently fair game to link to anything from linkbait. Internal or external, followed or otherwise, it was up to you. However, could you make the case that linking out from linkbait to external sites is a manipulation of the PageRank you acquired through a potentially manipulative practice? Isn't PageRank meant to be an indication not only of popularity but of supposed authority? Why should linkbait - the one night stand of web content - be able to pass on authority?
In reference to widget and badge-bait, Google recently stated:
"Widgets that are distributed with a link back to the site that created the widget are fine. However, going a step further and selling links to third parties is against our quality guidelines."The case that this mystery Googler was commenting about didn't actually involve the "selling (of) links to third parties," which makes me fear that search engines may begin cracking down on what you're allowed to do with your linkbait in general. The legitimacy of the widget / badge case isn't what I want to address here, but rather, the fact that Google recognises linkbait as a highly profitable linkbuilding strategy. And we know what they like to do to our highly profitable linkbuilding strategies.
The things we do (or the things we've see done!) with linkbait begin to feel a bit shaky when you take a look at them from a search engine's perspective. 301 redirecting mini sites to commercial domains is generally accepted as a good idea. People just don't like linking to corporate websites, no matter how good the content. Creating the content elsewhere, letting it reach its critical mass in terms of inbound links, and throwing it over to a company site has become a relatively standard practice.
Cameron Olthuis wrote about this just yesterday at Search Engine Land. There has always been an ethical question surrounding this, but its implementation has never been penalised. Hosting this content externally could be said to "help" users in that they'll perhaps take more notice of it and "enjoy" it more than if it were surrounded by corporate branding, or even a corporate URL. However, once you start making clever with the 301s, you can't really show how that's helping anything apart from your link profile. In this case, you keep the content the same. When you change the content, you've moved on to the bait and switch.
There's really no excuse for this one. You amass a lot of links to a page (with some sweet anchor text, if you're clever and lucky) and then either change the content to a something from which you'd like to pull in business, or you redirect the page to a commercial one. It's Search Engine Temptation Island. You know you shouldn't, but it's hard not to, especially when no one ever gets penalised for doing so. Will search engines end up penalising sites that switch content?
Total stretch, isn't it? I know that I've wandered pretty far off into the hypothetical with this one. There is no way you would ever be penalised for creating great content. The thing that amuses my imagination is the potential
I'd hate it if google cracked down on my linkbait. I'd be totally screwed and forced to live under the freeway and eat stray animals to survive. oh wait..
Uh huh..real cute, Google.
I'd really like to know who died and left google in charge? I mean really does any other company get to dictate the "rules" in the market where they compete? Does McDonalds make FDA guidelines? Does Ford control the regulations in the EPA? Does Delta make TSA policies?
Then why do we all follow what google says like mindless army of facebook bitten zombie chumps?
The sooner everybody wakes up and figures out the lava lamps and bean bag chairs are just window dressing on a monopolistic company the better we'll all be.
No follow is joke so may people are afraid to link to things naturally, and Google has directly influenced the way the web is built now.
I love it when you rant. And you're so right. I "try" to use "search engines" instead of "Google", and even then, I know how ridiculous it is.
And what's with the awesome quotes from the SEO world this week? First we have Lee's "wallet full of famous" and now your "Who died and left Google in charge," plus "like a mindless army of facebook bitten zombie chumps."
I have a love - hate relationship with Google. They love my Adwords money and I hate their policies.
Nice article Jane and I don't think it's a total stretch at all. I think that any activity aside from creating strong on page content is ultimately going to become fair game for google crackdown.
edited for sp.
and another quote by you Jane with 'linkbait - the one night stand of web content'.
Maybe that'll get into Google definitions!?
Yeah, I must say, I was pretty stoked with that one.
"...who died and left google in charge?"
REST IN PEACE (compliments of Danny Sullivan)
Open Text (1995-1997): Yahoo's original search partner was also a popular web search site of its own in 1995.
Magellan (1995-2001): An early search engine that saw its popularity drop immediately after being purchased by Excite in mid-1996. It was closed in April 2001.
Infoseek (1995-2001): Launched in early 1995, Infoseek originally hoped to charge for searching. When that failed, the popular search engine shifted to depending like others on banner ads. Disney took a large stake in the company in 1998 and went down the "portal" path that other leading search engines had followed. The site was also renamed "Go." Its failure to make money caused Disney to stop Go's own internal search capabilities abruptly in early 2001. Today, Go remains operating, powered by Google.
Snap (1997-2001): Launched by CNET in 1997, Snap first used Infoseek, then Inktomi, then created its own directory of human-edited listings that were coupled with clickthrough technology that ranked results in part by what people clicked on. It is currently powered by meta search results from Infospace.
Direct Hit (1998-2002): When Google first appeared as the hot new search technology in 1998, so did Direct Hit, featuring the ability to measure what people clicked on in search results as a way to make those better. It gained a deal with HotBot and was offered as a search feature on other portals such as Lycos and MSN. It was purchased by Ask Jeeves in 2000, then neglected over the following years. The site was formally closed in early 2002.
Very sad state of affairs, this search business. I abhor a lack of competition.
The sooner everybody wakes up and figures out the lava lamps and bean bag chairs are just window dressing on a monopolistic company the better we'll all be.
I am afraid this is such a line of truth that I wish someone would make a t-shirt out of it.
Seriously - no-follow are definately not in line the the official google line. Nor are spam reports. Would I add no follow if there were no search engine? Nope.
Would I submit a spam report if there were no search engines? Nope.
Would I use google if most my clients didnt use it? Nope. I mean I have nothing against them being a monopoly, but I do hate their dictative stance. Yet they dare talk about "... Microsoft now attempt to exert the same sort of inappropriate and illegal influence over the Internet that it did with the PC?" ????????
Um dudes, you already exert unfair influence over most the businesses that use the internet to carry out business. The same way windows was essential, so is Google, we may not like it, but we are stuck with it.
But be honest, you are about the profit margins arent you? Why deny?
"I mean I have nothing against them being a monopoly, but I do hate their dictative stance."
@ Rishi - When was the last time you saw a democratic monopoly? Just say it - "I Hate Them Being A Monopoly". So does just about everyone else except their employees and investors.
But thats just it Sean - they have EVERY right to be a monopoly. They work hard and long at it. They spend time money and thought into what they do - albeit not always for the user like they like saying. I am in awe of what they have accomplished.
But I dont like the way they maintain the holier than thou attitude. Dont talk about user experience, if you are going to dictate the use of no follows. You are (bulling?) scaring people into using them.
Ok, if we're going to be literal about it, they aren't actually a monopoly (at least not yet), but they can certainly bully the market around the way Microsoft does to PC Mfg's with their OS.
As far as rights go - actually - they don't have ANY right to be a monopoly. There are anti-trust laws in the US that make it illegal. That's pretty much the sole reason AMD is a competitor to Intel, otherwise they would have been crushed long ago.
they don't have ANY right to be a monopoly
Touche' ! I meant from their point of view - leaglly ofcourse its not allowed, and yep they arent a full monopoly. They have a right to achieve what they can - from a non legal standpoint - I know that if the law doesnt allow them then they will have to reconsider growth, or fractionate.
Graywolf, I'd imagine the person who died and left Google in charge of their own search engine, is the same person who died and left you in charge of YOUR business.
The answer is absolutely. It will get to a point (maybe it already has) where linkbait is having "too much" influence over the SERPs. When Google feels that day has come then watch out. Linkbait will go the way of paid links, and Google won't bat an eye at the hypocrisy.
When we look back at search in a decade, 2008 will be the year the rules of the game changed. 2008 is the year algorithmic search truly become blended with human review, not by the masses, but by the hundreds or thousands of SERP police Google is employing. Google has unofficially given up on pure algorithmic search. They seem to be realizing there is no substiture for a human eye.
...abSEOlutely....
enough with the puns ! SEOriously!
I suspect that the human factors they're employing are a stop gap measure until they up their game on algorithmically tackling spam (i.e. whatever G defines as spam, perhaps linkbait).
The best search engines should always return the best content -- not the most popular or the content with the best link profile. One day, I'm sure some SE will hit this mark -- before then, SEO rules the SERPs.
Just to drill down on the widgetbait question, in addition to selling links in widgets, hiding links in widgets is not okay. Hidden links are already covered under our quality guidelines, but I wanted to clarify that hiding links in widgets would still violate our guidelines.
"But I mention in section 405, subsection 5, paragraph J of the EULA of our widget license that we hide links in our widgets" is not clear disclosure for regular users. Google takes a very bottom-line approach to hiding links in widgets: if a substantial fraction of regular users of the widget wouldn't even know that they have hidden links in the widget, we would still count that as hidden. Consider https://www.searchenginejournal.com/google-loves-transparent-links-hit-counter-spam/5615/
where Loren did some investigation and contacted people who had hidden links in some of their widgets:
"I took it upon myself however to email some of the sites listed above which responded that they had no idea the hit counters were serving links to commercial sites:
"
Again, this is a bit of a detour away from the original article, but I wanted to make sure that Google was clear on links embedded in widgets.
Just to be clear, by hidden, I would guess you would include: same colour as background, images with misleading alt / title attributes, hidden with css, hidden with javascript. Presumably this doesn't include any widgets where the link is clearly visible to someone viewing it?
I would imagine many webmasters wouldn't know how to remove even a non-hidden link, but they have to be OK, presumably (unless paid-for - as per conversation above)?
Does "hidden" include links that are right out in the open - no CSS hiding them or matching foreground / background colors?
In other words, is it okay to have a widget with a link attached, provided the user can see the extra link and remove it if they want?
If it's in plain view then the person putting it on there site should be aware of it or is stupid and deserves to give you there link juice >:)
I noticed Mystery Googler say that it's not okay to include a link to a site that didn't create the widget. This implies that free links aren't okay, either.
I'd have liked to see this written into Googlaw before it was enforced, though. If it already is recorded somewhere, someone please link to it... I'm not saying I don't believe it might exist somehwere; I just can't find it.
Google is never going to give finite rules of what is ok and what isn't because so much comes down to intent.
It really comes down to the sniff test. If the smell of it can be mistaken for a can of spam, then be prepared for it to be treated like spam. In the case of linking to 3rd party comercial sites using widgets with exact anchor text a site is trying to rank for smells like a large spam dinner.
I guess what I was wanting was a link to a Googler's statement about such a thing, like Matt's statements here and the quote from the Guardian. They've said some relatively definite things, although I agree that we won't get much done if we sit around waiting for them to lay it all out for us.
I'm 50 / 50 on the third party thing because part of me says, "bloody hell. You've given someone a neat piece of content for free and you should be allowed to include a link to a third party, commercial site just as you can include links and ads on UGC."
But I can also see a search engine's persepctive and the perspective of a blogger / webmaster who doesn't understand linking, who misses the link, who finds the third party site offensive or who finds the idea of linking to a commercial property undesirable.
Ethically, I wouldn't have a problem creating a widget like that. But that's just me, and my moral compass obviously isn't pointing due north on this one ;)
So I know the official line in selling links - whats the line on selling links in widgets as text - do these need to be nofollowed?
I believe selling links in widgets is also "not allowed." As I said above, I'm curious about free links that are visible in widgets that don't link to the site that created the widget.
I humbly offer this as an alternative title to this post: "Is Google gonna Warren G your Badge?"
Fantastic and insightful, and makes you think... will widgets become the new reciprocal link?
ExSEOllent post Jane! The comments are useful and insightful too! Enjoyed the "PageRank is broken!" statement. Have been wrestling with this issue for quite a while myself and have come to the conclusion that the boundaries are getting increasingly blurred and the original PR concept is being subtly overhauled by the increasing social component of search.
1 thumb for your creativity. In your avatar are you listening to the sound of the ocean in that melon or are you training for the fruit olympics shotput event?
Why thank you...am actually consulting with an acknowledged expert....
Sometimes unbiased opinion from a totally external source is extremely enlightening.
True... but a melon?
Cant be worse than getting advice from this guys teacher... ;)
Hehe, I think you are actually correct Rishil. If you rubbed melon juice on the side of your head you'd make less SEO mistakes than appying that guys lessons. Plus you could eat the melon afterwards. Then again, if you had some fava beans and a nice chianti...
ooh dont nmention those - they are a touchy subject! Poor Sean and I got thumbed down for that thread... lol
Hmmm, the melon juice hypothesis is great, only one problemo though....it ain't no melon, it is a pumpkin....
You should be ashamed. Everyone knows that using pumpkin juice is totally blackhat.
I would personally love to have the problem of having so many links that I would be tempted to abuse the power.
Not that I would, I'd just love to be tempted.
I agree with Jeremy too, that the day is coming, and it's gonna hurt a little. But that's just how it goes.
My meta descriptions take about 37 seconds. Ya got me beat.
My favourite guideline?
Where's feedthebot when you need him? Pat - can you explain that one to me?
Does this mean our clients shouldn't use our services? Some of them definitely don't want their competitors to know they are working with us (damn NDAs - hides all the great client names). Since they clearly don't want to explain that they have hired Distilled to their competitors (even though we are doing whiter than white stuff for them - even just site reviews), that means they shouldn't be doing it according to G's guidelines.
Wait. What?
That is the most ridiculous guideline in my book.
Back on topic briefly, I think that the evidence we know of (even without paid links being involved in the bait) shows that G would certainly *like* to discount irrelevant bait...
Which evidence is that Will? All the evidence I've seen (apart from the instance that provoked this post) has them actively encouraging it..
That bit always irked me. "Would you feel comfortable explaining what you've done?" is something that an overbearing great-aunt might say to a five-year-old who's been caught frying ants with a magnifying glass.
And no, I wouldn't feel comfortable explaining all my cute, whitehat tricks to a competitor. That would be SEOicide.
SEOicide. Great.
A good rule of thumb is whether you'd feel comfortable explaining what you've done to a website that competes with you.
Its like asking G if they are comfortable explaining to Microsoft how their algo works.
Its business - of course I wouldnt feel comfortable telling my competitor what I am doing to achieve success, whether its black or white.
Jane, what a thoughtful post. I think that Google (and the other engines) will just start to ratchet up the temporality component of the algorithm as we see more and more examples of arguably "manipulative" linkbait like the ones you describe.
Interesting article!!!
Wow Jane, what a great piece! Very interresting stuff. I still don't think Google will ever catch up to the strategies (schemes/tricks) SEOs come up with. It will always be a chasing game. SEOs chasing Google and Google chasing SEOs.
We'll all be alright as long as we stay on top of things.
Users link only if they like the bait being offered and hence a website gets benefited for benefiting it's users not for luring a Search Engine.
I dont think it's much of a use to perform 301 content switching on your website as a user will automatically abandon if he finds commercial content on the page that is different from the title and description tag that he saw on the Google page. But I don't see any harm if the website owner is smart enough to blend the bait content with the desired call for action so that the user gets what he wants and if willing, he may proceed further to buy the product or serivce. So the ball remains in the user's court most of the time and this is what Search Engines also want. So I don't see any reason why website's should be penalized for link baiting.
Moreover link baiting is an art and I don't see any reason why an outstanding piece of work shouldn't be rewarded with back links.
As the link baiters increase, link baiting will only get tougher and tougher and people will start looking for new ways of earning links that'd be more effective than link baiting.
So Mr. Google need not worry.. :)
People do this once they think they've drained all the use out of users and they just want to benefit from the links. This is why they sometimes change the content to commerical content.
I think you may have missed the point (I think) Jane was trying to make.
You run a business selling nappies (not very sexy). You create a piece of linkbait called "10 sexiest women ever to have bought an iPod whilst at a Ron Paul convention" and get bucket-loads of links.
Yes you provided lots of enjoyment to that oh, so central audience of 18 year old virgins on digg, but how have you done anything to benefit your own audience of parents looking to buy nappies (sorry, diapers in the US).
Answer? You haven't -and this is the issue (as I see it and, I think, Jane does).
Following up with the "who died and left Google in charge" comment from graywolf - what about the other search engines, any thoughts on how they'll treat linkbaiting going forward? Or, will they just hang back and see what the playground bully does and just fall in line?
Personally, I don't utilize questoinable linkbaiting practices - I guess I'm a little old fashioned and believe that if you build it (with white hat SEO and great content), they will come.
Great post Jane - and great comments and discussion as always.
The other engines tend to be far quieter than Google, don't they? I mean, we have Matt C here, adding comments about one aspect of Google's policy regarding linkbait.
I know I use "Google" a fair number of times in my post when I should have used "search engines," but it really seems like it's the only one whose actions are going to make a huge difference to our practices, and its employees also the only ones who might stop by and comment.