Search Engine Updates vs. SEO
Author: Bruce Zhang
Webmasters always anxiously wait for a search engine update.
Those who rank well want to see their sites get even better.
Those who didn't do well expect a major boost. Those whose sites
get de-indexed anticipate a major comeback. Those who just
started new sites bet on their sites will make into the first
page of search engine result pages (SERPs) for their targeting
keywords. Of course, not everyone will be happy about the
results of search engine updates. After all, search engine
traffic is a zero-sum game - someone loses and someone gains.
Then, the webmasters start preparing for next update.
The Business Reasons Behind The Major Updates
All major search engines claim that they strive to present
search results to users with the highest quality. But the
business of search engine is business. What they won't tell us
is that there're many business reasons for every major search
engine updates. Search engine traffic is hot commodity - it's
free and has higher conversion rate since the searchers are very
close to make their buying decisions. The downside of the search
traffic for webmasters is that they don't have control at all.
Your sites may be ranked #1 today, but nowhere next day.
Search engine companies will, no doubt, use the search engine
traffic to maximize the values for their stakeholders. Google's
Feb. 2 update (allegra update or Superbowl update) once again
shocked the webmaster community like last Florida update. The
noticeable change in Superbowl update is that well-established
sites rank well even for specific keywords that aren't even
highly relevant to their pages. You may think the move is to
fight spams and improve the quality of SERPs. That's only part
of the story. The results of the update is that the websites of
well-established corporations (with never ending press releases)
will get a major traffic boost from Google. Google does this by
algorithm changes, not manual manipulations.
If we think search engine traffic from Google is really an
incentive to try it free before you buy. This time, Google
decides to lure the major corporations to test the benefits of
search traffic. Major corporations will likely increase their
spending in online advertising and those news agencies may even
drop their law sues against Google if they see the traffic from
Google justifies that their sites benefit from including in
Google index database.
Is this the real driving force behind last update? Only Google
knows. If you own Google, however, you will do the exactly the
same.
Will this negatively impact the user experience? - maybe and
maybe not. What is the real difference between the #1 spot and
the site that ranks #100? - the backlinks. Backlinks don't alter
the quality of a page at all.
When they say technology, they mean business. Major technology
changes are always driven by business needs. It has nothing to
do with "good" or "bad".
Strategies to Cope with search Engine Updates
The Internet and the Web was once hailed as the new medium and
the new opportunity for small business and site owners. They
will be disappointed as big three peek into fortune 500
companies's deep packets. There're strategies they can use to
cope with the search engine updates, however.
-
Create a portfolio of website using different SEO techniques. If some of your sites get hammered in a update the rest may
benefit from the update.
-
Generate traffic from all major
search engines.
-
Use the search traffic to build loyal user
bases.
-
Build sites similar to the sites of well-established
companies. The tags, on-page, off page optimization techniques
will become less and less important as major corporations aren't
interested in those types of things that geek webmasters are
interested.
|