Pandas, Penguins, and Popsicles
Are you still working through your newsfeed of SEO material on the 101 ways to get out of panda 4.0 written by people that have never actually practiced SEO on their own sites? Aaron and I had concluded that what was rolling through was panda before it was announced that it was panda, but I’m not going to walk here on my treadmill and knock out yet another post on the things you should be doing if you were gut punched by that negative a priori algorithm (hat tip to Terry, another fine SEObook member, for pointing out to me those public discussions that showed the philosophical evolutionary shift towards the default assumption that sites likely deserve to be punished). I’d say 90% of those posts are thinly veiled sales pitches; I should know since I sell infographics to support my nachos habit. Speaking of infographics, there’s already a great one that covers recovery strategies that still work right here.
Should I write about penguin? Analysis of that beast consumed the better part of 2 year years of my waking time. Nope. Again, I think it has already been adequately covered in a previous blog post. There’s nothing particularly new to report there either since the next update may be completely different, might be just another refresh that doesn’t take into account those slapped in the 1.0 incarnation of the update, or may actually be the penguin everyone hopes it is, taking into account the countless hours agencies have spent disavowing links and spamming me with fake legal threads should I not remove links they themselves placed. I wouldn’t hold your breathe on that last one. Outside of crowdsourcing pain for future manual penalties, I don’t expect much relief on that front.
Instead, I think I’m going to talk about popsicles. That seems like the kind of tripe that a SEO blog might discuss. I bet I can make it work though. I’m a fat dude in the Phoenix area and we already had our first 100F day, so I’m thinking of frozen treats. Strap in.
Search tactics and I’d even go so far as to say even certain strategies are like popsicles. When they are brand new they are cool and refreshing, but once exposed to the public heat they fade…fast. Really fast. Like a goop of sticky mess, which users of ALN and BMR can probably tell you.
Bear with me.
If you have a tactic that works, why would you expose it to the public? Nothing good can come of that. Sure, you have a tactic that works 100% but since I’m a loyal subscriber you’re willing to share it with me for $297. Seems legit. I’m not saying all services/products pitched this way are inherently ‘bad’, I’m just saying you aren’t going to get a magic bullet, yet alone one hand-wrapped and delivered by filling out a single wufoo form…sans report.
Would you share with a really close friend? I suppose, but even still the popsicle isn’t going to last as long since it is now being consumed at an accelerated rate. There’s the thought of germs, contamination, and other nasty thoughts that’d prevent me from going down that route. Cue the “Two SEOs, one popsicle” reaction videos. No. There are two ways to make the best use out of that popsicle.
- Practionioner: eat it quietly, savor it, make it last.
- Strategist w/ resources: figure out the recipe and mass produce it as quickly as possible, knowing that after enough public heat is on, the popsicles will start melting before they can be eaten, and no one likely that weird, warm orange sticky stuff that tastes like a glucose intolerance test.
There’s another caveat to the two above scenarios. Even if you’re a strategist with deep resources, unless you’re willing to test on your own sites, you’re just effectively selling smoke on an unproven tactic.
So there you have it, tactics are like popsicles. Disappointed? Good. I’ve been doing SEO since 1997, so here’s a secret: try to create engaging content, supported by authoritative off-page signals. There’s an ebb and flow to this of course, but it can be translated across the full black/white spectrum. Markov content in a free wordpress theme can be engaging when it is cloaked with actionable imagery, with certain % of back-buttons disabled, or when you make the advertising more compelling than the content (just ask eHow). Similarly, well-researched interactive infographics can engage the user on the other side of the spectrum…just more expensive. Comment spam and parasitic hosting on “authority” sites can tap into those authority signals on dark side, as can a thorough native campaign across a bunch of relevant sites backed by a PR campaign, TV commercials, and radio spots for the light side. Budget and objectives are the only difference.
Go enjoy a popsicle everyone. Summer is here; I expect a lot more heat from Google, so you might need one.
About the author: Joe Sinkwitz is the Chief Revenue Officer at CopyPress. He {Tweets / posts / comments / shares his thoughts} on navigating the evolving SEO landscape on Twitter here.
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