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by mtrimpe
4551 days ago
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Very much so. Google's decisions are starting to have impacts on other companies' bottom lines which easily run into the millions of dollars. Just as a thought experiment ... how tempting do you think it would be for Google to do the following: 1) Run a query to identify all companies that cut their AdWords spending over 50% over the last year. 2) Look at which of these companies are now getting significant numbers of click from organic results. 3) Find out what is causing them to rank high organically. 4) Penalize them using a generic message and refuse on principle to answer any inquiries as to why. Apart from (anec-)data that seems to be pointing towards this already happening; should we be OK as a market with this approach? Especially when considering that the rules are so vague that almost every site is guaranteed to break some of Google's guidelines? |
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Please provide this evidence. I am getting a bit tired of this misinformation. Organic search and paid search are silo'd. To say that Google favors advertisers in the organic results or the other way round, is simply not true. It would destroy Google's credibility.
>how tempting do you think it would be for Google
It approaches conspiracy thinking. I love that, but I think HN is not the place. You are basically accusing a company of a very evil act, without proper evidence. Do you realize that many Googlers frequent this site? It would be a shame if all they get to read are conspiracy theories and baseless accusations.
>Especially when considering that the rules are so vague that almost every site is guaranteed to break some
Hogwash. Their rules are very clear and succinct.
https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/35769?hl=en
Maybe if you want to spam or manipulate, then these rules are vague. Maybe when you don't read the guidelines then they are vague. I bet that if you can point to a rule that almost every site breaks, without them knowing, then Google will adjust that rule to be more clear.
You can not please them all.
>Penalize them using a generic message and refuse on principle to answer any inquiries as to why.
You can certainly not please the spammers that were caught with their hands in the cookie jar and then take to the internet to say that Google is unfair, and that the big brands get away with anything.