The
Biggest SEO Scam of All
By Cari Haus
While
there are many ethical SEO firms serving Internet users today,
a few notorious practitioners also exist. One of them called me
just the other day.
“We
can get your site to be number one in the search engines for the
top 20 search terms you choose,” promised the telemarketer. I
don’t usually give telemarketers the time of day, but somehow
found this fellow to be intriguing. It was a cold and snowy day
in Michigan right at the moment, and somehow I felt warmer just
hearing him glow about the sunshine beaming through his own office
windows.
“Show
me results,” I requested. So we cruised the web together, and
he showed me some client sites that really did have top rankings.
At first glance the sales spiel sounded rather inviting, but after
taking some time to consider and evaluate his company, I determined
that what this friendly young salesman offered was nothing more
than a scam.
As
I did my homework, several red flags jumped out at me. By researching
his company on the Internet, I learned that they employed no less
than 250 telemarketers soliciting SEO clients on a continual basis.
With all due respect to the size of this company, I found it hard
to believe that they could service the numerous SEO clients they
were recruiting in a very meaningful way.
I
asked the salesman about this the next time he called. He informed
me that their SEO service was highly automated, built on proprietary
technology that was so ahead of its time that no other firm could
compete. In case you didn’t catch it, the previous sentence contained
red flag #2. In the words of the old adage, “if it sounds too
good to be true, it probably it.”
The
above was only the tip of the iceberg, however. Upon further questioning
of my enthusiastic sales contact, I learned that it wasn’t really
my url that they wanted to promote. Their plan was much more beneficial--for
themselves, that is. They would set-up urls to be doorway pages
to my website. Their urls, not mine, would be optimized to get
high in the search engines. They would maintain control of and
ownership of the urls, so if I ever went out of business, they
could sell all that traffic—and value I had paid so dearly for—to
one of my competitors. Pretty nice deal for them. I pay them big
bucks on an annual basis to drive traffic to a url which they—not
me--own. Of course, I would benefit from whatever sales came through
their url as long as I continued to ante up cash.
I
had a good friend who fell prey to this scheme a few years back.
An unscrupulous SEO “specialist” talked her into paying big bucks
for a website with a url which the SEO firm owned and controlled.
The SEO firm then billed my friend much more than they had originally
contracted for. When she balked at the bill, they threatened to
shut down traffic to the site.
While
this firm also promised hordes of traffic and top search engine
listings, the only significant traffic my friend ever got was
garnered through pay-per-click. To make matters worse, the SEO
firm hid links to their sites throughout the html of her website.
Another
fault I found with the SEO firm mentioned first in this article
was the search terms they crowed about taking first place for.
To say the least, they were rather obscure. It’s a pretty impressive
accomplishment to come up first on the web for the search term
“furniture” or even “log furniture”. But if you design a page
that brings up your company first on Google for a search of “Birmingham
Tuscaloosa Avenue Dry Cleaners”, big deal. And that’s what this
SEO firm was doing.
Although
I never seriously considered dropping $3000 or whatever it was
for their services, the final clincher came when I asked what
type of traffic I could expect for digging into my pockets.
“I
can get you an average of 100 hits per day,” he told me. Then
he showed me stats on some of their clients sites that had, over
the course of a year, built up to 100 hits per day. I don’t know
about you, but I want a lot more than 100 unique hits per day
on my website. I’ve achieved those kinds of numbers—and better—by
myself. Why should I pay them for what I consider to be mediocre
results?
Don’t
get me wrong. I do believe in SEO firms, and because of the success
I’ve been having on some of my top search terms, may engage in
that business myself someday. But after researching the issues
carefully, I would warn fellow webmasters to beware of any SEO
firm that:
•
employs a boiler room full of telemarketers
•
automates most or all of their services
•
insists on gaining and retaining control of the url to be promoted
•
focuses on lengthy and obscure search strings
•
touts sites that are garnering a mere 100 hits per day as examples
of their success.
Of
all the bad practices mentioned above, the one I found most offensive
was the idea that the SEO firm should own or control my url. While
owning the url would seem like a good idea for the SEO firm (they
could always collect their fees by threatening to shut down the
site), it isn’t so nifty for the client. If I pay a firm to build
my business, I want them to do just that—build my business. To
pay a firm to build traffic to a url they own is really like paying
them to build their business—and that, in my opinion, is the biggest
SEO scam of all.
Copyright
2005 Log Cabin Rustics
Cari
Haus has been successfully selling rustic log furniture and beds
on the Internet since 1997. Copyright 2005 by Cari Haus, website
http://www.logcabinrustics.com/.
Permission is granted to reprint this article, either online or
in written publications, as long as the copyright information,
this paragraph, and a link address or a link to the Log Cabin
Rustics website is attached at the end of the article.
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