Posts Tagged ‘Law Firm Search Engine Optimization’

The Debate Continues: Black Hat, White Hat or Just Plain Bad SEO?

Sunday, August 28th, 2011

The goal of Google’s panda update was to ferret out black hat SEO, however in the process it penalized some websites which were not perhaps intentionally duplicitous, but happened to be filled with plain bad SEO. Even if your legal website or blog was not one of the many who were slapped by the new update, it could be time to do another “once-over” to ensure your legal site does not employ any of the tactics which could garner you a penalty.

What is Black Hat SEO?

Sooner or later Google will catch most all black hat tricks, so it’s important that you know exactly what to look for. If you are not clear on what black hat SEO really consists of, it basically refers to search engine optimization “tricks” which are downright underhanded and unethical. Black hat SEO seeks to deceive the search engines, giving your legal site a ranking it may not deserve. The most common ploys used during black hat SEO consist of keyword stuffing, hidden or invisible text, cloaking, content farming or link farms. While these tactics will get your website noticed quickly by the search engines, they fail to provide your potential clients with anything of real value.

Keyword Stuffing, Content Farming and Link Farms

Keyword stuffing consists of filling your legal website with information which is almost unintelligible due to the overuse of keywords. Unethical SEO companies also write keywords in white text onto a white background—you or I are unable to see the keywords with our human eyes, yet search engine spiders can easily see them, bringing about an immediate bump up the search engine ladder, at least until the search engine discovers the ruse. Spinning software takes one article which might have started out as high quality copy, then spins it into hundreds of articles used by many companies as a means to link to their site. Again, most search engines will eventually figure it out if you are using content farming or article spinning techniques. A link farm consists of a website which is set up with no other purpose than increasing the link popularity of other sites by increasing incoming links to those sites. These links are generally totally unrelated, and will be picked up by the search engines.

What is White Hat SEO?

White hat SEO will enhance the quality of your legal website by giving value to your reader, and, although it will take longer than using black hat SEO, you will eventually earn a high website ranking. White hat SEO chooses a solid keyword phrase which accurately represents your legal page, then uses it in the Meta tags. White hat SEO contains content which accurately reflects your business and your website, and gives your reader value and worth. When your legal website garners other high-quality websites linking to a legal blog post or page within your legal website, you have a quality inbound link, further boosting your search engine rankings. This is in sharp contrast to black hat SEO which incorporates a less than stellar link list which is traded simply to boost search results. In short, any SEO tactic which conforms to the stated guidelines of search engines, making no attempt to deceive them, is considered white hat SEO.

What if Your Legal SEO is Just Plain Bad?

Even if you have avoided being penalized for obvious black hat SEO techniques on your site, you still need to be hyper-vigilant about checking your legal sites often to ensure the content is superior, the links are legitimate and of excellent quality, and, while your keywords are used judiciously they are also used in a way that makes sense and doesn’t alienate your reader. Using white hat, organic SEO will get your legal website noticed—in a good way!

Legal Website Rankings and SEO Planning for 2011

Saturday, January 1st, 2011

Because the end of the year often brings reflection, you can use that backward reflection to your advantage when planning your legal SEO and law firm website for 2011. The business of web and SEO changes so quickly as to literally make your head spin, and 2010 brought some developments which will affect the way we operate in the coming year. So, before we head into 2011, let’s check out some of the major happenings of 2010.

2010 Happenings

Page speed became a ranking factor with Google earlier in the year, although at present only the especially slow sites are likely to suffer a negative impact.  Google’s May Day update had many websites reporting significant losses in long tail traffic—the sites which seemed to be impacted the most had a lack of, or low number of, deep links, and high quality websites came out on top. Of course, that begs the question as to what constitutes a high quality website; Google’s algorithm tended to define high quality in terms of bounce rate and time on site. Google Caffeine followed closely after May Day, and although it had no direct impact on rankings, its purpose was to speed up the indexing system at Google. Using Caffeine, Google can make updates as they are discovered rather than indexing in batches. September brought Google Instant which now displays search results as you type into the search box. While some users were less than enthusiastic about this particular change, it is likely here to stay.

Hot on the heels of September’s Google Instant, Google Instant Previews made its arrival in November. Google Instant Previews consists of a small magnifying glass which sits to the right of the title of your search results. While it is expected that a really small percentage of us (5 percent or less) will actually use Google’s newest gadget, it is widely thought that the magnifying glass is more about data collection and ranking than helping users. If, for example, a user clicks the magnifying glass then chooses not to go to that page, it could be seen as a negative signal, and vice versa.  Finally, thanks to a Bing/Yahoo merger (of sorts) Bing results were integrated into Yahoo, and Yahoo’s independent search index in the U.S. was retired, causing a leap in Bing’s market share from just under ten percent to over 25 percent. So, while Google still dominates, Bing is now a competitor worthy of serious attention. October brought more news for Bing with the Facebook/Bing partnership. What this should tell you is to get yourself on Facebook now; Facebook has the potential of becoming the individual’s as well as the corporation’s go-to social network and search engine. The Facebook/Bing integration may well push Bing further up the ladder, close on Google’s heels.

What’s Ahead for 2011?

The drive for new search ranking signals will certainly continue in 2011, with more and more social signals being used by the search engines. Of course Google will continue its quest to increase performance, and Google and Bing are both expected to make some major shifts in the area of search in the coming year. Because Bing is striving to increase its market share and Google is holding hard to what they already have, both companies are likely to seek out significantly higher levels of search personalization.

Search engines are becoming more and more sophisticated even as we speak and will be turning up the heat for publishers to add as much unique value as possible to websites. This will be measured by watching how the web reacts to what your law firm does by using signals such as links, social media, user behavior and interaction with your site, and how your law firm website compares to others which cover the same topic matter.  This is definitely the time when you and your firm need to think like traditional marketers; engage with your community, offer items of value and consistently produce high quality content. As search engines continue to improve their algorithms, sites that are seen as valuable by users will be more readily recognized. If you have consistently take a holistic approach to your law office SEO and online marketing efforts, then the changes made by search engines are likely to favor you at the expense of competitors who have taken a short-term approach.

The biggest game-changer of 2011 may well be how social media will continue to affect legal website rankings and SEO; even though Google may have missed out on partnering with the world’s largest social network, don’t expect them to stay static in that area. Google Places has, in effect, changed the “rules” so now the attorney website with the most attractive or relevant preview will generate a higher number of clicks, making location-based keywords even more important to your firm’s site. Finally, for 2011, trust will be a key issue on all fronts. As people become ever-more worried about personal Internet security, having links and rank for your legal website will not be sufficient; all companies will be required to focus on building online trust. Your focus for the coming year should be first and foremost, to build your law office website’s trust by getting mentioned or referenced in trustworthy news outlets or by using social platforms to build high-quality, trust-driven links.

One thing we can absolutely expect in 2011 is changes in the way we currently managing law office websites and legal SEO. The Internet changes by the instant and Google seems to love changing their algorithms on a near-daily basis, meaning we can expect lots of changes in the coming year.

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