SEO Contest: Want Results With Those Rankings?
WHY IS search engine marketing defined by diametric opposition? It seems like for every question there are two extreme answers. And these polar opposite viewpoints are held with a tremendous amount of passion. The smallest questioning of our position can unleash a firestorm of retribution. Blogs kick themselves into high gear as aspersions are cast without a second thought. We rise passionately to defend our position, questioning the pedigrees and mental capacities of our opponents. How could someone be so incredibly dense as to not see it our way?
In the past few months, little has raised such a passion of opposing viewpoints as the questioning of the value of organic optimization. The verbal feud that took place in the blogosphere is well-known to most of us within the industry. If you've been one of the few that has remained blissfully ignorant of the David Pasternack (co-founder of Did-It) "Is SEO rocket science" debate, count yourself fortunate. It's not so much the debate I want to focus on, but the fallout of that debate because I think there's a valuable lesson that we can all learn from it. As the organic community rose to defend its collective value, Threadwatch.org had the idea of launching an SEO contest. The premise of the contest was simple. Whoever ranked highest for the phrase David Pasternack by noon on March 1 was the winner. A Who's Who of SEOs rose to take the challenge, using every trick in the book to try to propel their page to No. 1 in the Google data centers.
Predictably, the tactics ranged from the white to the dark gray. The winner, when all was said and done, was the page that had been ranking previously for a chef in New York also called, coincidently, David Pasternack. There was a post on Dave Pasternack's Did-It corporate blog that said, with a decidedly sarcastic tongue-in-cheek approach, "See? We told you so! SEO isn't rocket science and after you guys threw the best you could at the algorithms, the page that was there before the contest was still the one ranking number one on Google." That's one viewpoint.
One of the most interesting entries was a late one by Greg Boser. Greg's approach leveraged the existing notoriety of David Pasternack, the chef. Greg's approach was not so much based on technical tricks (although they did play a role), but rather a very clever strategy that was aligned with the inherent nature of people who frequent the Web. Greg didn't win the contest, but he came within a whisker's width of doing so. The fact was, Greg reluctantly entered the contest late (more irony, both Greg and Dave Pasternack called SEO contests stupid, but both entered) and he wanted to time his entry so that it climbed the search engine ranks and claimed the top spot within 12 hours of the closing of a contest. He wanted to show that not only could you control your organic visibility, but you could do it with a fair amount of predictability. His timing was a little bit off, due more than anything to variations in the various Google data centers, but he definitely showed that with the right approach, you can influence search results.
Recently, I wrote a column about the future of SEO and SEM agencies. And I said that the time may soon be coming when the technical wizardry that SEOs tend to rely on may have limited value. One thing, however, that will never have limited value is the ability to understand how people think and work -- and then to be able to translate that into an online reality.
Gord Hotchkiss is the president of Enquiro, a search engine marketing firm. He loves to explore the strategic side of search and is a frequent speaker at Search Engine Strategies and Ad:Tech. Check out his blog at http://www.outofmygord.com
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March 9th, 2007 at 3:20 am
Best article I've read in a long time. So often they are hyped or just plain wrong in what much of what they spew.
At the risk of further becoming a target, I'd just like to comment that these contests are interesting and educational, but rankings are a pretty poor indication of SEO success. I would much rather see a contest that uses traffic or better yet, SALES as a measure of success.
Rankings may or may not equal traffic, but trafic is finite. The only question then is about the quality of that traffic, and that is validated by conversions.
Given that kind of contest, I think many of those in our industry would fall far short of the goal and those that focus on what really matters, traffic/conversions would prevail.
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