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Pay for one INK page and have 100 dropped?

         

stcrim

3:59 am on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Just about every day I hear from someone who paid for a few pages in hopes of improving their rankings only to find out that INK dropped all their (so called BOW) pages.

Who has had this experience? And if you had it to do over and knew you would have your site dropped, would you pay again?

-s-

Ever buy a car and when you go to take delivery the mats are gone and the dealer offers to "sell" you a new set?

timotter

4:47 am on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)



I would almost pay to have my site taken out of their paid inclusion list.

chiyo

5:28 am on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



We had this experience. We only have a few paid pages. Will ignore the renewal, take a hit for a few months, and wait for them to crawl up again.

NFFC

9:28 am on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Never pay for pages on good domains, use a new one. imho

Tim

10:30 am on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Can someone send me an example of this so I can look into it. It shouldn't be happening.

stcrim

1:40 pm on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Sure - this is a client that just wanted to improve their AOL traffic. They had several pages listed in INK but wanted to target more specific kws and phrases.

We purchased two pages to experiment with and in short order INK flushed all but the home page and the paid pages. Needless to say they and we have moved on to more reliable sources of traffic.

Their site has turned out to be an unbelievable success story, but that would need to be posted in Overture and Google's forums.

The site is a very mild example - there are a lot worse cases of INK killing sites out there. (removed by stcrim 03/08/02)

Tim, did I just let the fox into the hen house or are you going to really be helpful and get this corrected - and give people back the pages they had in before paying.

-s-

(edited by: stcrim at 1:44 pm (utc) on Mar. 8, 2002)

adamxcl

2:32 pm on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



All this makes me torn and not making any decisions right now. I've debated using a few paid pages to improve my rankings but I have thousands in there already for free. Sounds as though I best stay away as I'd only pay for a couple...and possibly loss the rest (?)

Not a good deal, plus with all the termoil...who knows where and how long INK will show on other engines.

cfel2000

2:39 pm on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I've had major problems with INK. Just like above, if you pay for a page it seems the non-paid-for pages are dropped. I know have an important decision. Pay for some missing pages and hope the rest aren't dropped or leave it.

I thinks I'll leave it.

Are the free pages distributed as much as the free listings on INK.

P.S. Watch this space. I've heard ask, dh and teoma might be doing a deal with INK. If successful they will be a decent why to get listed in INK for free. I'll keep my ear to the ground and let you know.

buckworks

2:51 pm on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



It happened to me. Back in the fall I was starting to get a bit of traffic from MSN partners, so thought I'd try the paid inclusion so I could tweak a few pages for better rank. It worked for while - in fact the paid inclusion pages had great rank without tweaking, and I was getting hundreds of visitors a day from Inktomi partners. In December one of them was listed in the Ten Most Popular pages for its primary target key phrase, and several variants too.

But something changed. None of my paid listings are getting more than a handful of visitors each day, some days none at all, and none of my other pages are anywhere to be found in Inktomi.

I'd sure like to know what happened and why. For a while I considered my Inktomi listings one of the best business investments I had made in ages. Not these days, though!

nell

6:38 pm on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Some 560+ pages ranking in a keyword category from #1 to no lower than #3 in both MSN and AOL. Some 1800-2300 new visitors/day. All were IP cloaked from a new domain with another hosting service than the e-commerce site they were pointing to. No javascript, only server side redirect to the e-commerce site. Short(7K), crystal clean HTML pages with no style sheets, no javascript and no cross linking. In fact, no linking of any sort.

After 3 months of near orgasmic pleasure the whole site was trashed by INK. The domain name is trash. Nothing I have tried can bring this horse back from the dead. Nothing.

I am "s l o w l y" putting these pages up spread over several new domains and am getting ranked again. This time around I'm not cloaking and use a .js file to redirect. This time around I am ranking them #2-#5 with different doorway pages - being careful not to parallel what I did before. All pages are search term relevant and point direct to counterpart pages on a database driven site.

stcrim

7:59 pm on Mar 7, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Well, having read this thread I would say if the INK execs think the problem doesn't exist, perhaps they should visit the boys in the back room and find out how the system really works.

If this many people here have had the problem, how many thousands of people were trusting on INK and got their sites trashed?

-s-

Tim

12:33 am on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Steve,
I am looking into it. I am in London now so it is hard to coordinate on these things with the time difference. I will answer tomorrow. I investigated your issue today and have an answer I will post tomorrow.

stcrim

3:28 am on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Tim,

I appreciate your interest! But, I am not looking to have my personal situation corrected but rather some disclosure here as to INK's position is.

Publicly INK has been claiming this isn't happening, but we (including your tech staff) know it is.

The fact that sites have been trashed by paying for URLs is not in question. What is in question is:

1. What is Ink going to do about all the trashed sites, if anything...

2. What is their policy going to be on this situation in the future?

-s-

stcrim

3:32 am on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



adamxcl

Do not pay for a page on any site that has non-paid pages in the index...

-s-

minnapple

3:53 am on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I submitted a page on Tuesday.
I recorded the rankings on a sizeable amount of search results listing "free pages".
I am going to track and document what happens.
I have saved the (before) Pure Search results as part of documentation.
I will publish the information in some venue if it is newsworthy.

stcrim

4:48 am on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



In fair-play, has anyone submitted paid URLs where you had free pages from the same domain and those pages remained in place and ranked as before you submitted???

minnapple - thanks for the testing...

-s-

makemetop

5:31 am on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)



Yes - and I've just checked - they are still there. But I have also noticed a big tightening of Ink's spam filter which can make a whole site suffer a penalty if one of the pages in paid inclusion is deemed to be spammy.

However, I agree with NFFC - don't submit paid pages on sites which are already listed well for free - it can cause grief. The site I have done this on was a test and I wouldn't do it again - even though I haven't lost pages - it still causes me some other problems.

Tim

7:28 am on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Steve,
I need an example or examples to diagnose if in fact this is happening. The example you gave me does not have a paid listing for that domain. The homepage is a free page. We know about 2 other pages on that domain but they have no inbound links according to our index and were not included in the crawled index. If you have examples please send them to me on stickyMail or send them through the contact form on the web site.

stcrim

1:43 pm on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Tim - look a little closer. That site has two paid pages. If you are not sure how to check and see if a page is paid in INKTOMI, please sticky me for instructions -

Or, you might want to check with your technical team for instructions.

Inktomi has a non-public site that when the url is typed in reveals if a page is paid or not (or maybe it's so secret only the SEO community knows about it)

-s-

john316

3:30 pm on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Hey Tim:

You are basically insulting the collective intelligence of most of the members here. It is a widely known fact that participating in your PFI program results in the removal of your unpaid pages.

This is not an isolated incident, it is policy.

If it is not the policy of INK, it may be that you have some rogue "partners" that have access to the BOW db and do with it what they will.

I think it would go along way here if you were to just fess up and rectify the issue publicly.

Brett_Tabke

3:38 pm on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



All right relax everyone. Let's give everyone the full benefit of the doubt here. He was nice enough (I asked) to start posting here, lets cut everyone some slack. It may be a case, he just don't know. Once you get out of the inner circle of the tech rooms, things change.

Ever play that game of whisper your neighbor a story? By the time it gets down the 8th or 9th person, the story has changed? That's the way it is in corporations too.

mayor

3:58 pm on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



John316 >> This is not an isolated incident, it is policy.

Not on my site. I have a lot of free pages and a few paid pages. The free pages were in Ink all along. When I submitted some new paid pages, I could see no impact whatsoever, plus or minus, on the free pages.

I'm pleased that Tim is participating in this forum. I think we are all very fortunate that he is willing to look into this problem. There's been a number of people reporting this problem so it certainly appears real, but does not affect all sites or mine would have been trashed.

chiyo

4:09 pm on Mar 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



agree. I dont think its a "well known fact" that you always lose free pages when you submit. Saying it's "policy" is just guessing. Tim is trying to help but his welcome has not been in the usual tradition of WMW. Heck he's a brave man, and he needs credit for that as does Inktomi.

nell

2:01 pm on Mar 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Neutered site - important to us but impotent to others.

Background of trashed Doorway site:
I refer to my earlier post regarding a doorway site that was trashed. This site comprised of optimised pages for products within a competitive keyword category. As previously mentioned, all were IP cloaked. Approximately 20% of each page contained random text pulled from a somewhat large random text file of keyword phrases so as not to have pages that were too similar. The pages , however, were all "keyword stuffed" following the usual formula to rank pages in INK. The doorway site pointed to an e-commerce site.

Background of E-Commerce site:
Some 3500 products all within the same competitive business. No shopping mall with diverse, unrelated products. Site designed using PHP/MySQL. Never had an HTM/HTML product page of it's own. Always fed by doorway pages. It was done this way, of course, so as not to get the e-commerce site banned should INK tighten up on their policies - which is what happened. Had I not done so, I would not be writing this today as my client would have probably put a contract out on me.

New approch and resolution to problem:
Since the loss of the doorway site I spread the pages out over several new domains and did not IP cloak. Neither was I so "greedy" as the first time. I optimised all pages not for #1-3 positions as before but for #3-5 positions. I figured that if I could at least get back in the game I could later strategically tweak up, at will, certain pages of more importance. They still point to the same e-commerce site. All is going along exactly to plan.

Neutered site:
Since the loss of the doorway site I have, as part of my new approach, selectively placed optimised pages on the e-commerce site itself. I cannot get any HTM/HTML page to rank on that site. I have tried over a dozen versions of pages over the same number of keywords and still come up bumpkis. The same, exact pages that currently rank high on a new doorway come up bumpkis when placed on the e-commerce domain. All HTM/HTML pages put up on the e-commerce site now respond exactly the same. The page is read, it is placed in the optimised keyword category, but only the title and description of the index page are used. Yes, I get ranked in that keyword category but in positions #15-25. I cannot get INK to use the title, description and keyword data of the optimised page(the only things of real importance to INK).

Conclusion:
All the above was coincidental with the inclusion of Overture in MSN search results. INK, wanting to keep MSN happy with them and not wanting to be replaced by Google, cleaned out the top positions of competitive "money keyword" categories so the Overture listings would enjoy little competition. It was not enough just to put the Overture listings above the same results (as competitors would still be next to them), they had to eliminate, trash and purge. Whatever it took to make MSN happy. Without MSN there is no INK. They would find themselves accomodating the demands of their remaining partners just to keep them.

Doesn't this seem like the behavior of one engaged in the "oldest profession in the world"?

Damian

3:18 pm on Mar 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



>In fair-play, has anyone submitted paid URLs where you had free pages from the same >domain and those pages remained in place and ranked as before you submitted???

I did not notice any negative effects. Actually got more pages listed for free on a few domains after paying for a few pages.

stcrim

5:14 pm on Mar 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



nell,

I hope I get to meet you some day. My hat's off to ya and the "right on" post you just left...

-s-

Tim

5:33 pm on Mar 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I am looking into this problem and have noticed that something is not quite right. Will update you when we have it fixed.

Nell- if you think you have been demoted and have cleaned up your act you should email spamcrusader@inktomi.com and ask for the site to be reviewed. If it looks okay he will remove the demotion. I dont know what your domain is so it is impossible for me to tell you if you have been penalized.

nell

8:03 pm on Mar 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Thanks for the response, Tim.

In like kind, if Inktomi cleans up it's act and I give it a favorable review I may remove my demotion of it.

I have no problem playing by the rules if the other players(my competitors) do so. However, anyone who plays it straight in a card game with cheaters can only expect to walk away a loser unless they also cheat a little themselves. That makes the game difficult in itself without the dealer(INK) adding to the equasion by randomly changing the rules without notice - usually to benefit the high roll players.

Meanwhile, there are other games out there beside Inktomi. Games where one can play straight. Games where the best player, and not the best cheater, wins.

NFFC

8:06 pm on Mar 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>In like kind, if Inktomi cleans up it's act and I give it a favorable review I may remove my demotion of it.

Oh my that is so very funny!

Anyway, lets cut Tim a break, looks like he may be trying to help out here and of course he is now a wmw member, we always treat all members with respect.

Marcia

9:10 am on Mar 11, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>Do not pay for a page on any site that has non-paid pages in the index...

On one site, it may be worth losing the unpaid. It's got the ODP title and description from the site owner's submission, with name,inc. as the title and the exact keyword phrase at the beginning of the description (owner chosen). But it's totally worthless for that for any traffic, so it would pay in this case to give up the free listing to get the right title and description.

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