Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Panda And Penguin Projected Black Hat SEO Plan

Panda And Penguin Projected Black Hat SEO Plan

This kind of SEO based on Different Theory. don't use your main or money site for the backlink positioning. rather than that everything is same. you have to make different dummy site depending on the keyword or keywords. each dummy site will contain different keywords. and you have to target 1 month time frame. it will take any black hat expert 21-30 days to get top rank for your dummy site. after 30 days it will get ranking and it will stay there for 3 weeks at best. so each month you have buy new domains and keep working on it to keep your traffic to the main website.

now the main point people make mistakes. they don't regularly work on those dummy site. you have to work on them regularly and use different method to drive traffic to your main website.

few company goes crazy and use this method madly and over do it. remember that it will only cause you problem in future. so company makes more than 50-100 dummy site at the same time this will cause you many many problem.

for an example of this method in simple way you have a offer of "Tittle Loan" in your main website. then you will pick dummy site domain something like below:

1. www.tittle-loan.net
2. www.tittle-loans.co.uk
3. www.tittle-laons.us


For More Info You Can Contact With Black Hat SEO Experts

Monday, January 20, 2014

Google Penguin Recovery Case Study - What Type of Mistake A SEO Worker Can Do

As we continued our analysis, we discovered that the majority of the links pointing to CBAC were spam. A common problem.

  • The whole website was being run on HTTPS instead of HTTP. HTTPS doesn’t inherently damage SEO, but the encryption process does put extra load on the servers. This is an increasingly common problem as more people use mobile devices, which have slower connections. However, it’s not mission critical by any means.
  • We found a large number of nofollow links from blog comments. This wouldn’t be bad, except that the comments had sloppy text, and the links contained exact match anchor text.A huge number of links with exact match anchor text signals creates an obvious footprint, nofollow or not. This taints the entire link profile and makes it more likely to be flagged.
  • The majority of their followed links contained exact match anchor text. It didn’t matter where the links were coming from. The sheer quantity of links containing exact match anchor text is a dead giveaway that the links were created artificially. Since the anchor text wasn’t branded, it was also clear that these links were created by their previous SEO only to influence search results.
  • We identified several paid listings in directories.
  • We found several links from free directories. Directories themselves aren’t necessarily a bad place to get links, but when they make up a large portion of your link profile, and they aren’t the kind of directories that people actually use to find things, they start to become risky. Around the time that Penguin hit the landscape, Google had banned and penalized multiple directory websites that contained spam or junk links. These were undoubtedly playing a part.
  • A large portion of the links were coming from article directories. Using article directories alone isn’t enough to get you penalized, but we’ve never found them to be a source of useful SEO value. The links that they had obtained from these directories were almost entirely exact match. The sheer quantity of links from article directories combined with this fact was undoubtedly sending a red flag to Google.
  • While CBAC had put in quite a bit of effort to remove low quality links, there were still quite a few links left behind that we felt should have been removed.In particular, a massive proportion of the links were coming from blog comments. Again, the links were exact match. The comments were clearly, automated. We saw links coming from Japanese blogs, and containing English content. The data trail was overwhelming.
  • Finally, we found several links coming from pages and sites that weren’t even tangentially related to the subject of their website. This isn’t always bad, but it’s only justifiable if the audience is huge. In this case, it was quite clear that these irrelevant links were coming from sites that were not sending traffic at all, let alone relevant traffic. This sends a surefire signal to Google, and places your site at great risk.

Sunday, January 19, 2014

50 common reasons for Google Penalized your site

50 common reasons for Google Penalized your site

  1. Buying links. Some swear it doesn’t happen, but actual evidence is mixed. Buying links could certainly be seen as an attempt to manipulate PageRank, and therein lies the controversy. If you’ve been buying bad links (and lots of them), your actions could have caught up with you.


  2. Excessive reciprocal links.Swapping links was once an innocent marketing tactic until it started to be abused. If you’ve been exchanging lots of links with clients, it could be seen as a manipulation attempt.


  3. Overusing H1 tags. Correctly structuring content helps with SEO. The H1 tag helps Google to understand what the page is about.Excessive H1 tags could be seen as an attempt to pump Google’s listing with keywords.


  4. Internal 404s. Google wants to know that you tend to your content and weed out any errors and problems.


  5. You’ve got a legitimate link from a client in another country, yet it’s technically counted against you. Well, Google’s reasoning is sound: users generally tend to prefer one language, so linking to sites in another language isn’t that useful for them.


  6. Keyword stuffed content. There are all kinds of weird and wonderful ‘rules’ about keyword density in content. If Google detects a weirdly high number of keywords in a page, it may penalize you – rightly or wrongly.


  7. Footer links. Some web designers use footer links as a navigational aid; some try to manipulate PageRank by using the footer as a place to pass link juice unnaturally. There’s a short discussion about this on Moz.


  8. Missing sitemap data. Google uses the XML sitemap to parse your site’s structure and learn how it’s put together.


  9. Hidden links. All of the links on your site should be visible and useful to users. Never make a link the same color as the background of a page or button, even if you have an innocent reason.


  10. Broken external links. If you don’t keep links up-to-date, Google will assume you don’t care about the user experience and are happy to pack visitors off to various 404 error pages.Check links periodically and pull the duff ones.


  11. Scraped content. Sometimes website managers pull content from other sites in order to bulk our their own pages. Replace it with your own original content instead.


  12. Hidden content. Less ethical optimization tactics include disguising text on a page to manipulate the theme or keyword weighting.


  13. Anchor text overuse. Once upon a time, SEO experts worked on linking certain keywords in order to reinforce their authority. Since the 2012 Penguin update, the over-use of anchor text linking is strongly discouraged. Switch out your forced, unnatural keyword links for honest links phrased in real English.


  14. If Google can’t find your site, it would rather de-index it rather than keep sending visitors to a dead end.


  15. Consider the anchor text linking issue: if we repeatedly link to that domain, Google might see that as anchor text manipulation. If you do use an exact match domain, make sure it has plenty of great content on it, otherwise Google will assume you’re trying to fool people into clicking.


  16. Rented links. Some experts still believe rented links are valid and useful for SEO. They pay for them on a monthly basis and change them around occasionally. However, we’d consider them paid links, and so would most of these experts on Quora.


  17. Using blog networks. As far as Google is concerned, any kind of network is a sign of potential SERP manipulation. Most blog networks have now shut down or given users the chance to delete all of these incoming links.You should too.


  18. Affiliate links all over the place. Google isn’t necessarily opposed to affiliate websites, but a high number of affiliate links is a red flag that the content may not be up to scratch.Although it’s possible to mask affiliate links with redirects, Google is wise to this tactic, so don’t rely on it.


  19. Site-wide links. We all need to link pages together, but Google is constantly scanning those links for unnatural patterns.


  20. Overusing meta keywords. Meta keywords have been a topic for debate for some time.Make sure you use no more than five per page.


  21. Slow speeds. If your site’s slow to load, your users will get frustrated.


  22. Spun content. Spinning is content theft. It could land you in hot water if the Google penalty doesn’t catch up with you first.Sometimes content is spun by the ‘writer’, so you may not even know about it.


  23. Hacked content. If your site has been hacked, Google will quickly remove it from SERPs.


  24. Speedy link building. It’s natural to want your new site to rank quickly. Lots of similar links pointing to the same place is a sign of automation. Don’t artificially bump your link velocity: make gradual changes over time.


  25. Spam reports. Google has published an online form for spam site reporting. Your site might have been submitted as a potential source of spam, genuinely or maliciously.


  26. Forum linking. We’ve all used forums awash with signature links. If you add a forum link, use good, natural linking techniques and consider making it a nofollow too.


  27. Hiding your sponsors. Having a sponsor is no bad thing. Plenty of sites wouldn’t exist without them. Don’t try to hide your sponsors, but follow the rules: nofollow sponsor links and make sure Google’s news bot doesn’t crawl pages where those links can be found.


  28. Robots.txt flaws. The robots.txt file should be used to tell search engines how to deal with your site.


  29. Links to suspicious sites. Never associate yourself with a website that is doing something ethically or legally dubious. Hacking, porn and malware-ridden sites should be avoided. Also, try to remove links to other sites that have been penalized in the past, assuming you know about it.


  30. Over-optimization.Google doesn’t like to see too much of a good thing.


  31. Advertorials. The controversy around advertorial content was perhaps the most well-known of the pre-Penguin 2 debates. An advertorial is basically a page of content riddled with paid links, and often these pages were being used for aggressive manipulation of search results. The most famous example was Interflora: read about its penalty here.


  32. Too many outbound links. When linking to other websites, keep it natural. A high quantity of links is a sign that you’re swapping links with people for the sake of mutual SEO benefit.


  33. Redirection. If you’ve received a penalty on your site, using a 301 redirect could transfer the penalty to a new location. What’s more, the penalty could linger if you remove the redirect later.


  34. While metadata isn’t a cause for a penalty on its own, it can be a sign of a duplicate content issue on your site.


  35. Malicious backlinks. Your site NEVER deserves this penalty – but it is something you should know about. If you’re really unlucky, an unethical competitor may try to shove your site down the SERPs by getting it penalized. The most common cause is a malicious backlink campaign.


  36. Targeted keywords. Google is waging war against some of the keywords most frequently appearing in spam sites.


  37. Smuggled links. Don’t be sneaky and put links into script files. Google is much better at analyzing scripts and picking out weird links that shouldn’t be there.


  38. Poor mobile websites. Google can normally detect a valid link between your mobile site and your website. Make sure the mobile site is sent to a device where the user agent is set to mobile.


  39. Few outbound links. Google wants to see content that references other content of a similar standard.


  40. Content theft. Even if you don’t steal content, someone else could steal yours. This is troublesome, since getting the content removed could involve filing multiple DMCA takedown notices or pursuing sites in court. If you’re penalized for this, try asking Google to remove the stolen content.


  41. Ads should never dominate the page content or play second fiddle to an article or blog.


  42. If your content is poorly researched, light on detail or exists mainly to fill up the page, employ a professional rewrite it.


  • Don’t panic. Even massive websites suffer from penalties.
  • Disavow troublesome links. Ask Google not to count troublesome links that are harming your website.
  • Get some links removed. While disavow is good, it’s not perfect. Put in some legwork and try to get some of the links taken down.
  • Request reconsideration if your penalty was manual.
  • Wait it out. Sometimes it takes Google a while to act on your changes and disavow requests, and then it could take a while for it to re-crawl your site.
In a few cases, it’s better to abandon a site rather than fight a Google penalty: if your domain has been tarnished, there’s little you can do. But most penalties can be fixed with a little effort, some hard work and an ethical approach to rebuilding your site.