Over the years, I’ve made a habit of prodigiously extolling search
engine best practices per contra to taking shortcuts designed to trick
search engines into trusting that an online destination is something it
is not. This Halloween, I’ve decided to produce an antithetical essay to
my digital morals and beliefs by way of parody and embrace the dark
side of search engine spoofs.
Fear of spiders?
Not a problem. There are many ways to keep unwanted arachnids from crawling through your content.
For starters, why not avoid using visible text on your website? Embed
as much content as possible in images and pictures. Better yet, make
your site into one big splash page that appears to scroll to infinity
and beyond.
Also, make certain that the imagery loads as slowly as possible.
Consider yourself lucky that you will be able to streamline your web
metrics around paid search campaigns and not worry about those pesky
organic referral terms [not provided] by Google anymore. Keeping spiders
out of your content is your first step toward complete search engine
invisibility.
If your site is inherently text heavy, consider using dropdown and/or
pop-up boxes for navigation. Configure these with Flash or have them
require JavaScript actions to function. If possible, put the rest of
your web content exclusively in frames. Designing a website in such a
manner is another great way to keep all those bad robots out of your
site.
When it comes to URL structures, try to include as many ampersands,
plus signs, equal signs, percentage signs, session IDs, and other
dynamic parameters as possible in a multifaceted, splendidly deep file
structure. That way, your website will be made up of really long URL
strings that can confuse humans and spiders alike. Even better, add
filters and internal site search functionality, metrics tags, and other
superfluous attributes to your URLs, just to keep the search engines
guessing about your site structure. Get ready to burn your site’s crawl
equity to the ground, while watching your bandwidth spend soar, when you
wrap your site up like a mummy with this navigational scheme.
If you really want to turn your website into a graveyard for search
engine spiders, consider using completely unnecessary redirects on as
many different URLs as possible, taking multiple hops along the way.
Combine permanent and temporary redirects with soft 404 errors that can
keep your content alive in search indices forever. Make certain to build
in canonical tag conflicts, XML sitemap errors, perpetual calendars and
such, reveling in the knowledge that you will never have to waste
precious development time fixing broken links again!
Content creation budget got you down? Build in new economic
efficiencies by using the exact same content across as many domains as
your budget can spawn. Invest in machine-generated content instead of
having to listen to those troublesome user reviews. Make “Spamglish” the
official language of your website. Since you don’t have to worry about
looking at what keywords Google allows to send traffic to your
Frankensite, feel free to target irrelevant keywords on as many pages as
possible.
Additionally, try to keep all the title tags exactly the same on the
critically important pages within your site. Spiders don’t have good
eyesight – sometimes you have to shout to get their attention. Consider
keyword stuffing as a way to make certain that the search engines
understand precisely what your site is all about. If you don’t have room
to stuff unnecessary contextual redundancies into your web content,
consider using hidden text that flickers like a ghost when users mouse
over what looks like dead space.
Still not convinced you can hide your site from the search engines this Halloween?
Break out the big tricks, my friends, because we’ve got some link building treats to share.
If your ultimate goal is to bury a domain name for all eternity, make
certain that you participate in as many link farming free-for-all sites
as possible. When you get a chance to do so, go ahead and “splog”
other’s guest books and forums. In addition to buying site-wide text
links, demand that your backlinks be placed in the footers. While you’re
at it, sell a similar “service” to others.
Consider hiding some links in places that surprise visitors and
always embrace bad linking neighborhoods. You know the type of sites I’m
talking about… they’re the spooky ones and the non-paranormal that a
business person would avoid.
Have a wonderful Halloween this year, with the knowledge that you too can make a website completely disappear!
Disclaimer: I don't actually endorse that you try any of the
above; everything in this particular column should be taken with a
serious dose of tongue-in-cheek.
Source Link:- http://searchenginewatch.com/article/2302665/Halloween-Inspired-SEO-Tricks-to-Keep-Spiders-at-Bay
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