Read WebProNews
With Friends!

Googler: SEO Is A Bug, And Google Is Trying To Fix It

Is SEO just a bug in Google's soup?

Get the WebProNews Newsletter!
Top Rated White Papers and Resources
There are 9 Comments. Add Yours.
  1. Matt Cutts’ above assertion that …

    “he clarified his remarks after being told that such frank talk harms Google”

    … doesn’t deny that Google sees SEO as a “bug”, just that Googlers shouldn’t let that fact slip out to us Muggles.

    It seems to me that almost all of Big G’s innovations for search have at their heart the idea that the desired result is a click on Google’s advertisers or failing that another internal property which will result in $$$ for Google.

    I don’t think that Google should necessarily give away the goods for free, they just shouldn’t be quite so two-faced about it!

  2. Matt Cutts

    Chris, please post his followup as well, he clarified his remarks after being told that such frank talk harms Google.

    The conspiracy theory that we help advertisers rears its ugly head from time to time forcing me to debunk it. So let me say it again, you do not have to advertise to rank on top, especially for queries where we have no ads.

    If we started to promote our advertisers we would enter a vicious cycle of update after update where brands would keep ranking higher and higher. This has no basis in reality, as you all know.

    • His follow-up is in the article. Is there another follow-up?

  3. Google should just make sure not to shoot himself in the foot. At least not too much. Ads earn them money. So, it’ll be there as long as they need them or till they find a more lucrative way to do that.

    Now, it’s really interesting that Google dude called SEO a bug from the standpoint of Google because why would they have SEO guidelines? Basically guidelines for the bug? So, it looks that it does require some clarification.

  4. I would make a different articles’ title: Googler: BAD SEO Is A Bug, And Google Is Trying To Fix It.

    In general, proper phrase analysis and onpage optimization, following Google good practices is a good thing and Google likes that.

    • google generally create meta description, which helps google crawler.

  5. WHAT?? “It’s a bug that you could rank highly in Google without buying ads, and Google is trying to fix the bug.”
    WHAT??? “It’s a bug that you could rank highly in Google without buying ads.”
    WHAT???? “I’m starting to feel high from my neighbors’ second-hand pot smoke.”
    WHERE DID GOOGLE FIND THIS IDIOT???

  6. I don’t understand why this would be bad. You either pay to be at the top of the page (via ads) or you are in the top organic results because have the best content relevant to what I’m looking for.

    Doing away with option #3 — putting together some useless crap designed to appear on page one of search results — sounds like a great idea to me. As a user I see option #3 all the time and I f***ing hate option #3.

What do you think? Respond.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>