Top 10 SEO Myths
1. Satisfaction guaranteed
There is no such thing as guaranteed organic rankings. Distrust anyone who promises otherwise. There are about 200 factors in the Google ranking algorithm, and no one can control all of them. Most people who “guarantee” top rankings only do so for long-tail searches that get little or no search traffic — phrases like “podiatry malpractice lawyer on Main Street in Chatham”.
2. High Google PageRank = high rankings
Google PageRank is one of the 200 or so ranking factors in Google. It’s at best a fair indicator of a page’s link popularity, and it may be weighted more heavily than many of the other factors, but it’s not uncommon for a web page with a lower PageRank to rank higher in search results than a page with a higher PageRank. It’s a visible indicator of what Google thinks of your page, but again it’s only one of many ranking factors.
[Update December, 2021] Google hasn’t revealed PageRank for years. But there are third-party attempts to replicate it, perhaps the best is Page Authority from Moz. While important for rankings, it’s still only one of many factors Google considers.
3. Endorsed by Google
4. The meta keyword tag matters
I heard this one as recently as last week. Matt Cutts (“the Google Guy”) totally debunkrd that one in this video. Google considers the meta keyword tag to be a waste of time. Knowledgeable SEOs completely ignore it. [Update 2022: there’s some evidence that other search engines may still consider the keywords meta tag, and adding keywords there can’t hurt and just might help a little bit on other search engines.]
5. You can cheat your way to the top
6. Cram those keywords in
There’s no magic number of keywords needed to get a high ranking. You need to use the keywords, of course, but using them too often creates what I like to call “overredundancy”. The more common term is “keyword stuffing“. Forcing your keywords into a web page almost always destroys the page’s power to influence the person reading it and encourage them to want to buy what you’re selling. Pay attention to your keywords, and use them on the page, but make sure you’re always writing for your visitor, not for the search engines.
7. Spending on Google AdWords boosts your rankings
8. Landing pages
The concept of a “landing page” is relevant only to PPC. Almost any page on your website can show up in the organic listings. Don’t assume that people will always enter your site through the front door, for example. In SEO, almost any page on your site can be a “landing page”.
9. Set it and forget it
You need to monitor your rankings. There’s no guarantee your great rankings will be permanent, especially if your website undergoes even a minor redesign or if your competitors become more aggressive in their social presence and link building. At least keep an eye on your rankings so you can respond if they begin to fall.
10. Rankings are your goal
Rankings aren’t everything. High rankings are great, but you’re not in business to get high rankings. The bottom line needs to be your bottom line. Do those rankings result in visitors? Do those visitors convert into paying customers? SEO can get more people to your website, but it’s the job of your website to convince them they want to do business with you and with no one else. You need great content that’s effective in closing the sale. All the rankings in the world can’t make up for a poor user experience on your website.
Webmaster began optimizing sites for search engines in the mid-1990s, as the first search engines were classification the early Web. At first, all webmasters needed to do was to submit the address of a page, or URL, to the different engines which would send a “spider” to “crawl” that page, take out links to other pages from it, and return in sequence establish on the page to be indexed.
Yes, and that resulted in lots of spam emails promising to submit websites to hundreds of search engines. That and the keywords meta tag were perhaps the two most abused techniques, neither of which has any value today.
Nice top list my friend! Thanks for sharing.