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SEO Helping Google in many cases

Google, what do you think?

         

stcrim

8:57 pm on Feb 2, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The vast majority of 57,000 auto dealer web sites are built by two companies. They are database driven, built on frames and in some cases 90 to 100 percent FLASH.

Only a tiny fraction of them realize they aren't getting any traffic and have turned to SEO companies for help. This means building separate web sites that redirect "targeted" and "relevant" traffic to the dealers web sites. Or, doorway style pages that have to be clicked through. The auto dealer gets to keep his choice of web sites and gets "targeted" and "relevant" traffic.

EVERYONE WINS including Google!

Without the help of SEO NO ONE WOULD WIN, including Google. So doesn't it make sense for "spam" to be about the relevance of the search to the information delivered rather than the method of delivery?

It would seem to me that SEO and Google should actually be on the sames team rather than opponents.

Just some random thoughts...

-s-

rfgdxm1

9:03 pm on Feb 2, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Isn't the real problem that those 2 companies designing these sites aren't doing so in a way that is indexable, rather than just relying on flash? If so, I'd say the doorway pages are spam. The problem is those sites that can't be indexed. Those 2 companies need an SEO.

redzone

9:09 pm on Feb 2, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



stcrim,

I assume you are talking about two of the Big 3? GM/Ford/Dahmler-Chrysler?

Many dealers have independent web sites (domains), and have had so for several years. I know, because that is how I got into SEO. We designed online software that would import Chrylser/Plymouth/Dodge dealers new vehicle inventory into an online DB automatically for the dealer.

I would estimate more than 50% of dealers have their own domain. What methodology they use to index in Google is their business... :)

stcrim

9:28 pm on Feb 2, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Actually what I am referring to are the two companies that build independent sites for dealers. Those same two companies also build a lot of the manufacturer web sites.

They both have great sales teams selling sites that can't get found on Google.

I would bet the automotive industry is not alone with this problem.

When the search and the results are relevant, how can that be called SPAM?

-s-

mat_bastian

9:34 pm on Feb 2, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



It can't be called spam... I have believed this for quite some time... effective longterm SEO is "ethical" seo that is geared towards helping search engine and user. SEO should not be such a dirty word.

rfgdxm1

9:48 pm on Feb 2, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Sounds like spam to me. However, Google gets to decide what is spam for their search engine. Perhaps Google should make clear further exactly what is or isn't spam? For example, this specific case of doorway pages for sites that use flash.

jomaxx

9:56 pm on Feb 2, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



No, not everybody wins. The surfer does a search, is promised a site that matches his keyword query and corresponds to the title and snippet displayed, and ends up being redirected to something completely different.

SEO is not inherently unethical; bait-and-switch is.

mat_bastian

10:25 pm on Feb 2, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I may be wrong, but my take on the thread starters point is that he is talking deeper than doorway pages, he's talking about helping search engines to index according to what the site is really about. This is beneficial to all involved.

Please correct me if I'm wrong.

jomaxx

10:37 pm on Feb 2, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Well, he specifically says doorway pages and redirection.

There are lots of proper ways to make a site's content indexable, even if it uses a lot of flash. But IMHO (and apparently in Google's HO as well), what he's describing is not the way to go.

There was at least one good discussion of Flash technology recently that brought up these same issues.

rfgdxm1

10:57 pm on Feb 2, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I agree what he is proposing is flat out spamming. If someone must use flash, then they need to make the site's content indexable. Letting lousy sites using flash use spam techniques is the wrong way to go. Force them to redo their flash sites if they want to be indexed.

SubZeroGTS

1:21 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



search engines should cater to the pace of the changing internet. flash and stuff like it is going to be all over the place in the future.

everyone designing pages specifically for google is only gonna slow down progress.

mat_bastian

1:29 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The whole... "flash offers nothing but crap" arguement is so played out. Worse yet, it's wrong. I don't care how it happens, but flash needs to be indexable, and until then cloaking will occur. Spam is inevitable <snip>

[edited by: Marcia at 3:19 am (utc) on Feb. 3, 2003]
[edit reason] denigrating comment removed per TOS [/edit]

chiyo

2:42 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Mat Bastion, interesting comment. You seem to have strong and emotional views that I hope you wouldn't mind repeating in a room with actual real physical people around you.

The design professional must consider a whole set of things when deciding what formats and coding to use in designing websites. Part of that is search engine indexibility. As one small example, search engines do have problems indexing flash - they are much better at indexing plain text. Any designer should know that before designing in flash, and consider other promotion options such as PPC before complaining after the fact.

Flash advocates (and many of them ive noticed in WebmasterWorld are those that design flash sites for a living, which is understandable and perfectly legitimate), are passionate about their arguments, but labelling and insulting those who have other views as dinosaurs is hardly useful. In my view, they are simply realists.

There are very good reasons for the difficulties in indexing flash content, just the same as indexing any graphic or high tech content, including the resources required and how you can "rank" flash pages fairly with other pages.

If sometime in the future search engines can index flash content well, I may well use it, but im assuming by that time, free promotion in search engines will be a fairly insignificant part of web promotion activity.

If i had an art site, or a site selling things specifically for flash professionals I would consider using flash anyway, but promoting it in other ways than using SEO would be essential if I wanted a broader audience than my friends.

mat_bastian

4:18 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Not exactly sure that my comment was scathing enough to warrant editing out, but I understand that they were rather pointed, but the purpose they served was to make a point. The point being as follows. The negative attitude towards the swf file format is absolutely mindboggling to me. I am sick and tired of it being cast off as a toy for 15 year old egomaniac, Spielberg wannabe's. It is insulting to me when I hear comments such as "Letting lousy sites using flash use spam techniques is the wrong way to go. Force them to redo their flash sites if they want to be indexed." that imply that flash sites on the whole are lousy and not worthy of inclusion in a search engines index.

My clients call for flash... I see no other reason to warn them off about it when 98% of thier target audience can veiw flash, other than the fact that they cannot be indexed without resorting to dodgy tactics and violating a SE TOS if they want visibility via search engines. My clients want to use the technology. I am sick of telling them that they are wrong when only usability experts who can change their tune at the drop of a paycheck and search engines are the ones who feel that way.

I would say that to a room packed full of slash-dotters without fear.

Sorry to upset you all with the nostalgists comment, but that's what i feel like when we want our web experience to resemble that of 1995 and prior.

Our experience can be so much less stale than black, 14 point times new roman on a white background and there was a time that each and every one of us aspired to something more. I'm not so sure that holds true today.

Hope this doesn't bring the attention of Brett or a stern repremand. I feel and so will others that my point - if not my eloquence - is valid.

stuntdubl

4:28 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I have to agree with you somewhat Mat. The lack of inclusion of flash sites in search engines is a problem. In my mind, flash sites are some of the very best designed and sized sites. Some of them look amazing, and the compression can help to make graphic intensive sights much smaller.

It is a shame that there is not a good way to index flash sites yet. To me, it seems like it may be the difference between mac and pc. Style vs. functionality

I believe this is getting of topic, but if memory serves, this topic was discussed not to long ago. Maybe one of the admin's can point you in the direction of the thread as I am not very proficient at searching the archives myself.

mat_bastian

4:34 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I think it on topic because if search engines would allow a certain amount of spamming or at least loosen up thier spam definition, cloaking would not be an issue. That would instantly make the technology a viable e-commerce platform. As of now its risk your sites life and vitality or don't use it.

NickCoons

4:46 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



mat_bastian,

I don't think it's so much a search engine's reluctance to index flash as it is their inability. How would you propose they do so? OCR?

mat_bastian

4:50 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I don't really know whose responsibility it is, Macromedias, (although I don't believe the swf is proprietary therefore probably it isn't their responsibility) or the search engines. (who have the option of employing Macromedia SDK.)

All I do know is that "my" public asks for it and have been asking for it for quite some time. Somebody needs to take a step or SE's need to allow cloaking.

FAST took the first step... now the other engines need to follow suit.

stcrim

5:00 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



This thread sure took some twists. The original thought was "it should be acceptible by Google when the search and the results meet the searcher's goals no matter what method the web developer used to get there.

Flash was only a small part it - it also included sites pulled from a db and frames.

Google's answer might be not to use those things but then is it reasonable for everyone to have a flat, text based web site if they want to get Googlized?

-s-

NickCoons

5:13 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



There are a couple of different possibilities that I can think of.

- The search engine could OCR the flash site. This would probably be very inaccurate, because the OCR technology isn't there yet, especially since no particular portion of the flash movie is designated as text, so the search engine could conceivably take a picture of a tree and try to convert it to the most probable text (which it is not).

- The webmaster could have a hidden portion of the site (a <noflash> tag?) that has the text of the site in it, for search engines, and browsers that don't support flash, to pick up. The problem here, of course, is that there's no way to know if the webmaster is using the actual text from the flash, or just keyword spamming.

The problem is that text in flash is not necessarily stored as text in the SWF file, so the search engine can't simply extract it.

This is a technical limitation.. it is *not* the search engines saying "We don't want to index flash (or other modern web design techniques)."

europeforvisitors

5:38 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)



The webmaster could have a hidden portion of the site (a <noflash> tag?) that has the text of the site in it, for search engines, and browsers that don't support flash, to pick up. The problem here, of course, is that there's no way to know if the webmaster is using the actual text from the flash, or just keyword spamming.

Exactly. It's like Meta-Tag Spam: The Sequel.

skibum

5:46 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



IMO if a company decides to build a Flash site, they should be informed that they will need to spend advertising dollars to promote it.

fathom

5:48 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Flash / Shockwave

For this just get links with good anchors.

Although I have never attempted a Flash Site - Shockwave is a dream.

Link, links, and more links - the best results is a 2K html page with Shockwave (full screen) and few hundred relevant links and #1 ranked position >> 6.5 million competitive pages.

"Off-page", "on-topic" relevance is the key here.

rfgdxm1

5:51 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>Force them to redo their flash sites if they want to be indexed." that imply that flash sites on the whole are lousy and not worthy of inclusion in a search engines index.

I've seen a some humor sites and such effectively use flash. To be honest, never an e-commerce site that used flash well. If nothing else, grossly slows things down in most instance. Most of the world is still on dial up. And, as others pointed out, precisely *how* are search engines supposed to directly index flash? The OCR idea doesn't sound feasible to me, and surely not available today. The blame here belongs on either Flash designers who created a format not indexable by SEs, or webmasters who care about being indexed by SEs using Flash who shouldn't.

chiyo

5:59 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



apologies for continuing the off topc theme but you are absolutely correct skibum.. the whole strategy of a site should be considered even before the design stage. Clients who "ask" for flash and expect free SE indexing too are just displaying their naievety and need either to be educated or steered clear of.

and it will increasingly become less of a problem for the demand for the work of flash designers as PPC, PPI and other paid indexing makes free search engine indexing less of a consideration for clients.

Its always key to keep in mind that Search engines as we know them are TEXT search engines. OK there is some very early experients with image indexing and aural indexing, but these are in primitive, experimental stages. SE's do index PDF, *.doc etc simply because these can be reduced to text.

Flash as a technique is primarily visual. Search engines simply cant index images. Even the image search of search engines use filenames or surrounding text to catalogue them, not the actual file. Thats is because search engines are TEXT indexes, nothing else.. everything is reduced to text.

Getting back to the title of the thread, cloaking does not help SEs as it is too open to spam. SEs have to have a way to obkectively rank the actual content of a document wheter it is text, html, pdf or whatever. There is no way that search engines can. Fast does index flash, but there is no way they can rank them by relevance objectively.

The best advice I can give to flash designers is to convince clients that there are ways to promote flash sites other than through free indexes. I dont know about you, but PPC pomotional costs dont look to bad for me compared to the human time and unknowns involved in SEO. And im sure that the gap will decrease.

Surely if flash is embedded in a page rather than being a "flash site" as such, there are still many ways to get it indexed. There is still the title and metatags yes? and hyperlinked terms from external sites?

mat_bastian

6:06 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Macromedia Flash Search Engine SDK is already being employed by FAST. The technology is there and the lack of it is not a legitimate excuse.

"The SDK includes an application named ‘swf2html’. Swf2html extracts text and links from a Macromedia Flash .SWF file, and returns the data to stdout or as an HTML document. Swf2html is provided as a compiled application, and as a static library for linked library implementation. For complete functionality, see the file Readme.htm included in the SDK." -Macromedia

Your opinion of whether or not an .swf file is a quality vehical for distribution of information and of it's validity as an e-commerce solution is of no consequence in my opinion.

rfgdxm1

6:27 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



It does look like from that Macromedia Flash Search Engine SDK that .swf files may be somewhat indexable. How well this works I dunno. One practical issue is it seems that if this works, the nature of Flash will leave it doing poorly in SEs. Flash is visual. Standard SEO involves things like high keyword density, etc. What works OK on the standard web just isn't very appealing with Flash.

chiyo

6:32 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



thanks for the info on the swf2html application mat_bastion. That sounds promising.

Any reason why Search engines are not using it? I guess if it holds promise in helping the quality of their SERPS SEs will use it. I doubt there is any "conspiracy" not to index flash, so therefore excuses do not come into it.

Its obviously in MM's interests to get it used, so i guess they are doing the best they can.

Is it just that it's new or are there other problems - overhead to use it? performance issues? quality and usability of the conversion? compatability with swf versions etc?

Definately what IId like to see is an indciation that a file or page is a flash/swf format before i decide to go there. I do admit to generally avoiding flash and pdf, only for practical reasons due to the set up of my laptop and the way i use the web (to get text info for research rather than presentations). That just one person and im sure many dont mind. But i would be wary of search engines that send me to any large or high memory usage documents/pages without warning me first. I look at the page sizes everty time, and i would want this to work for flash too.

Krapulator

6:37 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Another problem with giving relevance to text inside flash would be an extension of the old 1x1 gif hidden link trick.

You'd get thousands of 1x1 swf files packed with keywords, links etc sprouting up

NickCoons

6:44 am on Feb 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



mat_bastian,

<Macromedia Flash Search Engine SDK is already being employed by FAST. The technology is there and the lack of it is not a legitimate excuse.

"The SDK includes an application named ‘swf2html’. Swf2html extracts text and links from a Macromedia Flash .SWF file, and returns the data to stdout or as an HTML document. Swf2html is provided as a compiled application, and as a static library for linked library implementation. For complete functionality, see the file Readme.htm included in the SDK." -Macromedia>

When designing in flash, the effects that can be done on text are minimal. So often, text is converted to a graphic so that many more effects can be applied to it. The process of converting the text to a graphic would render the "swf2html" inoperable, and that "text" would not be extracted, because it isn't saved as text. Though the user would still read it as such, a convertor/extracter, or search engine, would not.

Still not a reliable method.

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