Anatomy of a failed SEO initiative
I want to personally thank Tom Pick of WebMarketCentral for his tips on selecting an SEO consultant. His post dredged up some bad memories and very good lessons learned from my own experience.
(Stick with this post and you’ll find additional nuggets of SEO wisdom you can pull out when you need them)
A couple of years ago - late summer of 2007 - we launched our first-ever SEO initiative. We did it to support a brand-spanking-new website that was to be launched on January 1, 2008. We were bound and determined to do it – design, content, meta data, etc. – right from the beginning and knew just enough to get us in trouble, so we decided to engage the services of an SEO vendor. After a few weeks of researching best practices, we identified three potential vendors and started the evaluation process.
I haven’t polled the team, but I’m willing to bet there is a consensus that we made a poor decision. I know we did our due diligence and asked all the right questions, but the project still crashed. A lot of time was spent discussing tactics – white hat v. black hat – and we were convinced the chosen vendor used white hat SEO practices. In the end, what was positioned as white was turned a dingey gray through the combination of two key pieces to any SEO initiative: content and keywords.
The vendor’s proposal called for a list of 50 keywords from which they would develop content that would link to appropriate pages of our website. The vendor developed pages were positioned as a deeper layer of content that, through intra-linking, would increase organic search rankings. Makes sense. The more links to relevant content the better.
Red Flag no. 1:The first sign of trouble came when we saw the questionnaire that was to drive the development of the keywords. From the first question to the last two things were painfully clear. First, the vendor’s key market is small retailers. Second, their practice is structured around companies that have little if any website experience – design, content, etc. I must admit I cringed a bit when I submitted the answers, knowing they would be used to develop the 50 keywords. My cringe was vindicated a few days later.
Ref Flag no. 2: The keywords returned were, in a word, worthless. I’m being a bit extreme, but the truth is most of what the vendor delivered was meaningless. There were a few semi-useful keywords, but most had no basis in the reality of the industry I serve – manufacturing. Disappointed, but not completely disillusioned, I contacted the project manager only to find out they were not really a project manager at all. Worse yet, I found there was no project manager assigned.
Red Flag no. 3: Worser yet, the vendor does not assign project managers. Instead, there is a different body for each step of the process – keywords, content creation, link building, and so on. Worser worser yet, no one body knew how to communicate with other bodies assigned to the case – if communication was allowed. They lived in the ultimate Silo Land. I insisted on and got a point person assigned for the balance of the project.
Red Flag no. 4: In the end, I created all the keywords the vendor would use to create the content they promised. I even provided rules for how keywords could and could not be used. (For example, it makes no sense to discuss process manufacturing and medical devices on the same page). What I got back page after page of gibberish. Unusable garbage that wasn’t fit to line a digital birdcage. I called the “project manager” and expressed, in no uncertain terms, my utter disappointment with the content. The reply I got sent me over the edge. I was told that it didn’t matter that the content made no sense, only that the keywords were represented and ultimately linked to the appropriate pages of the website. That is the point at which everything became crystal clear - or dingey gray – to me.
The vendor had no intention of providing content that would actually add value to visitors to the website. With this revelation in hand, I asked about the possibility of one of these pages showing up in a search and someone, a potential prospect or current customer, seeing the nonsense we were publishing. The “project manager” assured me the chances of that happening were infinitesimally small. Furthermore, if one of the pages did pop up, the reader would likely navigate to the page, click on one of the keywords and follow that link to a page – one that I wrote – that contained the information they wanted.
Lovely. Just lovely.
In the final analysis we paid for the priviledge writing our own keywords that were ultimatley used to create worthless content that was just this side of being black hat SEO. The content as provided by the vendor still sits in a file. It is unused and will remain ever so.
Here are a few of the lessons I learned from the process:
- Ask potential vendors what their customer base looks like. If it doesn’t look like you, say good bye.
- When vendors talk about generating content, have them clarify exactly what that means. If their content isn’t fit for public consumption, if it’s something you wouldn’t show your mother, say good bye.
- Ask about the team that will be assigned to the project and who the project manager is. If they tell you the team is TBD, say good bye.
I purposely did not mention the name of the vendor, although I know at least one person reading this post knows the answer, but it is a well known name in the industry. They would do well to be honest about their core market and their SEO tactics because if someone does ask, I’ll recommend they steer clear of this one.
September 9, 2009 - Posted by Mark Palony | Marketing | Black Hat SEO, Keywords, Meta Data, SEO, White Hat SEO | 2 Comments
2 Comments »
Leave a comment
About
I am the marketing, communications & PR manager for a global enterprise software publisher based in Minneapolis. In the five years I have been involved in social media it has turned from novelty to passion. I continue to explore, question, and learn about Web 2.0 in an effort to leverage its power in the B2B space.
-
Recent
- Social Media, Smocial Media
- Look who’s back
- A short rant about LinkedIn discussion
- The social media revolution is over
- The NHL goes where others fear to tread
- Who’s the dim wit? You be the judge
- Terry Moran called for illegal Tweeting
- Train your people to use the phone
- Anatomy of a failed SEO initiative
- You say you want a revolution
- Is Twitter a danger to democracy
- Social media levels the playing field
-
Links
Categories
Tags
Albert Maruggi B2B B2C Blogging C2C Campaign 08 Complaints Facebook Google Henry the V Herb Brooks How iMedia Connection Kenneth Branagh Kurt Russell Lead Generation Liars LinkedIn Marketing McCain Microsoft Miracle Miracle on Ice newcom08 New Comm Forum NFL Obama P2P Palin Podcasting Politicians Politics Professional Networking Provident Partners Public Relations Setting Objectives SNCR Social Networking Society for New Communication Research Strategy Target market Twitter Wall Street Journal Web 2.0 WhyCalendar of Posts
Twitter updates
- RT @twailgum: RT @rwang0: Best Practices: Lessons Learned In What SMB’s Want From ERP Providers http://bit.ly/3YSnNs #ERP #SMB Tweeted3 weeks ago
- #Target announcing layoffs in their marketing unit: http://bit.ly/2EZ9bo Tweeted1 month ago
- Hey Google, I'm trying to sign out of my account and you won't let me. What gives? Tweeted1 month ago
- Newspaper sales circulation to drop: http://bit.ly/3rla8N #journchat Tweeted1 month ago
- The younger lad is performing 2nite at Orchestra Hall with the all district choir. 11 yrs old and he's already made the big time. Tweeted1 month ago
- The #Obama v. Fox News dust up got more interesting after Alexrod and Emanuel hit the airwaves yesterday http://bit.ly/1CqFRO #journchat Tweeted1 month ago
- @TomPick I think the other kid is named Snowman. Kinda completes the picture don't ya think. #balloonboy Tweeted1 month ago
- Invest in your Infor education with Virtual Inforum 2009 #vi09 Product oriented connections tracks register now http://bit.ly/HyvID Tweeted1 month ago
- Backwards in LA: http://bit.ly/3J4eQw Tweeted1 month ago
- When doing an online demo of your SaaS offering, please close your other tabs - I don't need to know you are into opera in Utah. Just sayin' Tweeted1 month ago
-
Top Posts
Search Wondering Out Loud
Archives
-
Blog Stats
- 1,517 hits
I remember when you were going through this. Fun stuff.
Have you retried the whole “SEO project” thing with another vendor?
We did not. We took what we learned, from our experience and self-education, and went forward on our own.