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TOPIC 1: APPROACH There are many different approaches and levels of service available to anyone looking for a search engine optimization company. Some techniques, such as "cloaking" or "doorway pages" can put your site at risk of penalization, although they may give you short term gains. For some, the risks of penalization associated with such techniques may be acceptable, but most prefer to play by the rules. You probably also want to be certain that your vendor doesn’t work with your competition. Here are three important questions to ask your potential search engine optimization company: 1. Do you create pages, optimized for my keyphrases, which aren’t built into the navigation of my site? If the answer is yes, you are probably dealing with a search engine optimization company that creates "doorway" or "bridge" pages (although most companies will call them by different names). Such pages may even reside on a different server and funnel traffic to your site. This technique violates the terms of service of most major engines. 2. Does your technique involve showing a different page to the search engine than to my visitors?
If the answer is yes, then you are probably dealing with a search engine optimization company that uses "cloaking". This is when the website server makes a note of the unique address assigned to each visitor, and when it notices that a visitor is a search engine, it feeds it specialized content designed to rank highly for certain keyphrases. Many engines specifically warn against this technique in their terms of service. Google is particularly harsh on sites that use cloaking, and is known to remove them entirely (when they find them). 3. Do you guarantee that you won’t work with my competitors while you are working with me? The optimization techniques used for your site could probably be used to help your competitors. Naturally, you don’t want your search engine optimization company taking the lessons learned from your site and applying them to a competing site (diluting the effectiveness of your campaign). Some unscrupulous firms will go so far as to use the positions they achieved for your site to sell your competitors on the need for search engine optimization.
TOPIC 2: RESULTS Almost every search engine optimization company has a "brag book" of positions that they have achieved. However, looks can be deceiving. When evaluating the past results of a search engine optimization company, there are really five important components to consider.
1. Which Engines?
2. Which Keyphrases?
3. What About An Entire Site?
4. How Have Results Stood Up Over Time?
5. Did They Really Do It?
(Continued in SPN Issue #335, Monday, May 26th)
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