There are so many SEO Techniques
we can find on internet. We know Black Hat
SEO, White Hat SEO, and others. You should
know the characteristic of Black Hat SEO clearly.
Knowing this will avoid your websites being banned
by Search Engines.
Here some characteristics of Black Hat SEO:
1. Cloaking
When website or web pages are set up to display
different content for a search engine spider versus
a human user. Cloaking delivers one version of a
page to an Internet user and a different version to
a search engine. The cloaked page is packed with
keywords and phrases that the website wants to be
highly rank for so.
It is done by cloaking programs that compare the IP
address of the requesting party to a database of
known IP addresses from specific search engine
spiders. If the IP address matches one on the list,
it serves a page that was specifically written for
the search engines.
There are good reasons for cloaking as well, such as
targeted advertising, but if you are trying to
manipulate your rankings in the search engines then
your site could be penalized or banned.
2. Spamming (Keyword Stuffing)
“Stuffing” long lists of keywords into the content
and the code on a page that makes the page
unreadable.
Ever seen a web page with a very awkwardly written
first paragraph where a certain word is repeated ad
nauseam? Here's an example:
"We sell the best father's day gifts for father's
day. If you like to celebrate father's day we can
help with the best father's day gifts for father's
day."
It's obvious that the page is trying to rank well
for “father's day gifts.” This is keyword spamming
or stuffing but it is just the tip of the SEO
iceberg; there is probably keyword stuffing
happening in the code: in the meta tags, invisible
text, alt tags, title tags, comment tags, etc. If
the word or phrase is repeated too often Google can
place a filter to reduce the site's rankings or
simply ban the site. Keyword density can be tricky
but, as a general rule, Big Oak shoots for 3% to 12%
of all text on a page to be our targeted keywords.
3. Hidden Text
If text or links are invisible to the website
visitor but can be seen by search engine spiders
then they are considered hidden.In the past people
would simply make the text too small to read by
using a 1 point font or make it the same color as
the background. Now that search engines have built
in algorithms to combat that, spammers are using
cascading style sheets (CSS) to hide text or using
<div> tags set to not display text on the page. It
is boils down to this: it is considered hidden if
the text or link is invisible to the website visitor
but can be seen by search engine spiders.Search
engines can easily spot this today so it is best to
avoid it altogether.
4. Doorway Pages
Pages that solely exist to rank well in the search
engines. Sometimes these pages are ugly, containing
paragraph after paragraph of meaningless text. Most
the time doorway pages are orphaned pages meaning
they are not part of the site's regular navigation.
A black hat SEO firm may use software to generated
doorway pages. They plug a few keywords in and the
software proceeds to generate pages where much of
the content is duplicated from other pages on the
site except they swap out the keywords.
5. Redirect Pages
Keyword-stuffed landing pages that quickly redirect
to the real page. These pages don't necessarily
contain content that any human would be interested
in. They are meant to show up high in search engine
results pages (SERPS). When you click on one of
these pages from the results, you are redirected to
another page–usually a high-pressure sales page. In
other words, the page you click to see is not the
page you actually get to read.
Sneaky redirection pages are set up in groups. They
target similar and related keywords or phrases. The
only links on these pages are links to other pages
in the same family creating a false sense of related
linking. The redirect can be automatic, done with a
meta refresh command or through other means such as
mouse moving while on the redirect page.
6. Duplicate Content or Websites
Setting up multiple websites with the same content
or having several pages on a site with essentially
the same information but different keywords inserted
here and there. You see the duplicate content method
a lot with travel-oriented sites. A "template
script" is written then regional terms, such as
state or city names, are swapped out on each page.
Of course, someone may have copied the content on
your site and put it on their site. The search
engines do not make any distinction on who had the
content first. Make sure no other site is using your
content. You can do this by performing a search
using some of your text with quotation marks (")
around it. If you do find someone is using your
original copy visit here to learn more about
copyright infringement:
http://www.google.com/dmca.html.
7. Code swapping
Submitting a text-only version of a web page to the
search engines in an effort to gain high rankings
for that page. Once the desired positions within the
search engines are achieved the search-engine
friendly text page is swapped out for a content page
designed for human visitors. This will only work for
a limited time as the search engine spiders will
eventually return to that page and find its content
has changed.
8. Linking to Unrelated Sites or Bad
Neighborhoods
Link campaigns are good thing when done correctly;
we would say they are a necessity in today's SEO
world. But linking to bad neighborhoods is a sure
way to lose your ranking. If you aren't careful
about who you are linking to you can easily
disappear overnight. Basically, while you may be
ethical and do everything right, linking to someone
who isn't can be considered guilt by association.
Always verify your links to other sites. Make sure
they have page rank and are indexed by Google. Avoid
linking to any sites that use spamming techniques to
increase their search engine rankings. Regularly
checking outbound links from your site and removing
any offenders is a good idea.
A few site types to avoid:
1. Free-for-all link farms
2. Adult sites
3. Gambling sites
9. Link Farms
Typically a network of sites that are all
interlinked to one another and have no other benefit
but to try to boost the link popularity of the
sites. Link farms are mostly used to try to increase
the Google PageRank of a site.
Well after everyone saw the Black Hat techniques
everyone also should see What does Google say?
"Don't deceive your users, or present different
content to search engines than you display to
users," Google says, and they list some bullet
points on avoiding being banned.
1. Avoid hidden text or hidden links.
2. Don't employ cloaking or sneaky redirects.
3. Don't send automated queries to Google.
4. Don't load pages with irrelevant words.
5. Don't create multiple pages, subdomains, or
domains with substantially duplicate content.
6. Avoid "doorway" pages created just for search
engines, or other "cookie cutter" approaches such as
affiliate programs with little or no original
content.
All the best,
MES
The concept of
advertising
online gave birth to the idea of
internet marketing, and is the reason why today the dedication of a
website hosting deal and the quality of a
web design
matters more than ever.
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