Five SEO Scams to Avoid

There’s no magic bullet to help you build your online business. There I said it. It’s out there on the Internet now and there’s nothing I can do to take it back. You’d be amazed how many people I meet or talk to who believe they’ve found The One.

There are a lot of ways to tell if a Search Engine Optimization firm is legit, but here are five guaranteed signs that the company (or person) you’re dealing with is scamming you:

Guaranteed Search Results

There are exactly three companies in the world who can guarantee you top quality SERP (Search Engine Result Page) results. They are:

  1. Google
  2. Yahoo
  3. Microsoft

Anybody else that tells you they can guaranteed top quality organic search results is trying to separate you from your money and usually at an inflated rate. There is absolutely no way to guarantee making it onto the first page of a major search engine unless you’re dealing with Matt Cutts and I’m pretty sure he’s not taking bribes.

If it looks like a duck …

Quality SEO work is not cheap. My blog here has a PageRank of 5. That’s really good for a personal website. Want to know how I did it? It’s all here on my blog. It’s a lot of hard work, more hard work than most people can imagine. It’s about sifting through hundreds or thousands of pages on your website and tweaking every one of them so if somebody says they can do if for cheap, they’re simply lying.

Organic Results

An organic results is a non paid result. Google listings for example are organic unless you’re paying for an ad placement on the SERP’s. Make sure that the company that you’re hiring isn’t running paid links or postings on unrelated pages to artificially bolster their results. Frankly, scamming people with fake results is too easy so make sure you keep your eye on the Queen. 

Their Own Secret Formula

There is no secret formula. Honestly, there’s no such thing as a secret formula to SEO. Search Engine Optimization is real, but there is no secret to it. In fact, you can do it yourself if you have the time and knowledge. Read this, in fact read any article by Darren Rowse and then if you’re still confused buy his book. Here’s the secret in a nutshell:

  1. Write content people want to read
  2. Make sure you understand the basic structure of HTML
  3. Make sure you understand the two meta tags
  4. Repeat

OK fine, there’s a bit more to it than that or his book wouldn’t sell but for free I’ll give you this advice … as soon as your SEO firm tells you they have a secret formula, run.

Paid Links

Do you know what Google hates more than a gopher in the garden? Paid links. I promise you, paying for links will get your website slapped so fast you won’t know see the light of day for a month. How do I know this? Because I listen to the people who work there

The way I read it, the people at Google take pride in what they do and their whole corporate mantra “do no evil” actually appears to be true. I used to think Google was just a robot, spidering the Internet looking blindly for content. Then I discovered that Google was a company made up of people, and those people took a lot of pride in what they do, that led me to understand that Google was like any gardener … if you try to steal their carrots, you’ll get a shovel on your furry little head.

9 Responses to “Five SEO Scams to Avoid”

  1. I think SEO can be cheap, if you only do the basics. If you want to do a complete job, then yes, it takes a lot of time (money), but like anything else, there is the 80/20 rule.

    As I talk with small business owners, they don’t even know the basics, much less the exhaustive stuff. Start small and work your way up.

    Exhaustive isn’t cheap, but “good enough” can be.

    Conrad Walton’s last blog post..How Much Does Wordpress Really Cost?

  2. [...] Five SEO Scams to Avoid :: Christopher Ross 27 January 2009 1 views No Comment There is no secret formula. Honestly, there‚Äôs no such thing as a secret formula to SEO. Search Engine Optimization is real, but there is no secret to it. In fact, you can do it yourself if you have the time and knowledge. … See the original post: Five SEO Scams to Avoid :: Christopher Ross [...]

  3. Mike Collins says:

    Its scary how many people are enticed by ads promising they’ll be listed in the top spot on Google. Use common sense…how can they possibly guarantee that?

    Mike Collins’s last blog post..Dreamhost Coupon Code Saves You $50

  4. Thanks for the comments guys. Conrad, you’re absolutely right about the cost of SEO being much less than people might imagine. Since most people have no idea what they’re doing, many companies take advantage of them. I have customers I bill $100 every three months for high quality SEO work and I have have other’s that I bill $1,000 a month for SEO … there’s a massive difference between the two levels but in the end what matters in that clients are getting quality SEO suited to their specific business level. Mike’s also right of course … there’s no way *anybody* can ever promise you anything other than the best they can do.

  5. Best Teeth Whitener says:

    There really is no secret formula apart from the four basic steps you outlined here. And yet everyday I come across some new offer from some alleged guru promising top Google search engine rankings if I just use his new “breakthrough method” or “automated system” or whatever (which can be had for a price, of course – $67 seems to be a popular price for such things). Like you said, though, anyone can learn basic SEO and do it themselves if they’re willing to work at it.

  6. @Best Teeth lol, I get about ten of those emails a day :)

  7. Ned Carey says:

    Well funny thing is they often can get you near the top. But it’s often with black hat tactics. That may get you there but it’s a lot harder to keep you there that way.

    Ned Carey’s last blog post..How do I Make Money in Real Estate?

  8. Adis says:

    How does this work? You wrote about Paid Links and posted a link to Matt Cuttsis blog where he further explains about paid links. All that is fine. There is BUT here. On top of this page, yes your page. There is a Google AdSense advert that reads: “Only $1.40/Link!”. So, Google is happy to take the money from the advertiser who practices something they hate. Is something wrong in ths equation or did I mix things up?

  9. @Adis – You’re right there’s a bit of a double take on that one and worst, from the looks of things Google *will not* punish people purchasing links from services such as Yahoo or themselves (via AdWords). So what’s the right answer? One of the toughest part of my job is helping clients sort out the rules and on this one, I’m going err on the side of caution.

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