It seems that many internet marketeers, such as Harvey Segal, are abandoning Google and the other search engine placements in favour of other traffic generating techniques.
Given my experience of SEO I can sympathise with this point of view. Having built high content optimised web pages and ranking well in my niche area at one point I was surprised to be overtaken (almost overnight) by far poorer content sites in the same niche. It seems that we are always at the mercy of changing algorithms in the ranking 'black magic'.
Having spent a good deal of time and effort, over a long period, developing sites I now question whether this is indeed a constructive use of my time? Surely, the goals of web promotion is to ensure effective sales of your product or service yet the time required to maintain these rankings merely act as a diversion to the business of selling.
I am certainly hoping to focus on the profit generating aspects of web promotion rather than the technical skills of site optimisation.
It would be interesting to hear other views on the subject.
Given my experience of SEO I can sympathise with this point of view. Having built high content optimised web pages and ranking well in my niche area at one point I was surprised to be overtaken (almost overnight) by far poorer content sites in the same niche. It seems that we are always at the mercy of changing algorithms in the ranking 'black magic'.
Having spent a good deal of time and effort, over a long period, developing sites I now question whether this is indeed a constructive use of my time? Surely, the goals of web promotion is to ensure effective sales of your product or service yet the time required to maintain these rankings merely act as a diversion to the business of selling.
I am certainly hoping to focus on the profit generating aspects of web promotion rather than the technical skills of site optimisation.
It would be interesting to hear other views on the subject.