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"There is no such thing as Unicorn Hosting"
- Matt Cutts "Well.. yeah. What do you expect? Matt Cutts has an agenda. Of course he's going to say that" - Unicorn Hosting Sales and Marketing Director |
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You most likely won't be pitching us a 'controversial' service, and come across as a master of something that you are not. Also, we all know what qualifies you, we ALL SEE IT, we all have seen it, we all have been there. That proof or respect from the 'general businessmen' is already there, we know what you can do. Whether some people have issues or not with you on the boards, you now your business, there is NO question. |
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Generaly speaking, since there is nothing else to guage what an "expert" is, I would go off of his level of success. He seems pretty successful, so he must be doing something right. |
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Serps would be a pretty good gauge to determine whether someone had the slightest clue, wouldn't you think? Pretty much any single example would suffice. There has been none, and and doubt we will ever see one. |
i love this thread. :)
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Education wise... if someone has other opinions of seo or seo hosting, I think we are all ears here. I have used BD's host.... I just realized when doing it that, while I can SEO - I'm no god at at and I don't do it enough to benefit from his services. In his case, he isn't an SEO Specialist, he is a hosting company that helps SEO specialists.. He is qualified because it's what he does... I could tell you about coding (as an example), but others could tell you far better than me, but they aren't going to tell you - that's the difference. |
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This ends RIGHT FUCKING NOW... The next person to bring up the issue of how Baddog took credit for writing this article will be banned.
No I am not fucking around. These threads are not to turn into a bitch fest because you guys don't like this or that. We made it clear that we would be giving credit and extra push for the those who participated in this series. If you guys don't like it, SHUT YOUR FUCKING MOUTHS! I don't want to see it in this thread, or any further Educational Series threads from here on out. This is the last time I will mention this. |
You don't get serps by getting different IP A & C class nets approved by ARIN. You don't automatically get serps by setting up hosting at different datacenters and aggregating them to one control interface. That is where baddog's expertise lies. Fuck some people are dense.
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Was away at XBIZ, will respond to real, on-topic questions as I agreed.
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I am sure it all fits in their algo in some way, but how much is anyone's guess. Apparently Bruce Clay feels it has some significant weight. I know goodgirl had experimented with this before and had similar results. Quote:
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You are a smart guy, I am sure you could figure out some of our phrases if you looked. |
I re-read the original post 3 times and i still have no clue what it was about.
I think it was about something called HOST CROWDING, but i still don't understand what it is. How is it relevant to SEO? Can you explain? |
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Any more questions? |
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Bump.... err wait.. it's a sticky.... nevermind.
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Couldn't you guys take the Host Crowding argument to a new topic thread and leave this one untainted as Eric requested? It's a good subject to debate and learn from by others experiences and thoughts.
Maybe these Education Series could be locked as soon as they're posted. |
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I also have been recently subject to a MEGA-SUPER-GOOGLE sandbox penalty and lost thousands of first and second page placements, and more than half of my overall traffic. Note: I DO NOT feel that 'SEO Hosting' was responsible for this ban. However, the above quote is a very, VERY important read for ANYONE who is considering signing up for 'SEO' (or any other type of) hosting with the intention of crosslinking, link wheeling, or any other type of manual manipulation / link sculpting strategies. Different IP's is a good start, which is what Gotwebhost provides. However, the nameservers on ALL these accounts (at least mine) are registered to...guess who? This is a point of commonality. Outside of this, so is your registrar, whois info, affiliate ID's, site plugins, templates, and all factors listed above and more. Now, there is no PROOF that any of these factors have direct SEO implications, but if you think your a-b-c link strategy or 5 different IP's are fooling the big G, you're sadly mistaken. The creation of a truly 'organic' network in the purest sense is nearly impossible to achieve. The networks I had created were what I though to be VERY organic and VERY well crafted, with all the above factors taken into consideration and more. Most importantly, all sites had UNIQUE, ORIGINAL content. This above ALL ELSE is KEY. This network grew slowly and steadily for close to 2 years - till summer of 2009, when close to 400 varied sites were unceremoniously dropped over a frighteningly short 2 day period. However, after careful examination, there were small, NEARLY undetectable points of commonality to most of these sites. These sent up a flag, and...well...you know the rest. Bottom line: Be careful. It CAN happen. And now, back to work... |
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Great post Lloyd
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Near as I can tell it was a combination of tracking ID's along with a very similar (but NOT identical) contact form and tos template used across the sites. It has also occurred to me that I may have fallen under a blanket 'affiliate' penalty, whereby google determined that the sites in question were adding 'no real value' and therefore didn't belong in their SERPS - and used the points of commonality listed above to find them all. Example: - 8 sites with unique designs / original content which employ all discussed 'stealth factors' are in promotion of sponsor site A. - 3 of these sites are on the first page of Google (with the other 5 in the top 100) along with sponsor A's site. - Google notices these 8 sites have subtle points of commonality (ref codes, similar text, cms signature, etc) - and seem to talk a great deal about Site A. - While these 8 sites break no Google Webmaster Guidelines, it's clear that there sole existence is simply to get the visitor to sponsor site A - and as quickly as possible. - Big G asks the question "Why do we have 3 listings in our top 10 that are, for arguments sake, the exact same thing - this isn't helping our users" - Big G also notices that these 8 sites have a lot in common with these 32 other sites - and that these 32 have a lot in common with these other 84 sites...and so on...and so on... -You know the rest. Of course, sites like these make up half the internet...lucky me getting caught. I'm taking what happened as a glimpse into the 'future' of how Google will list results. The Big G is getting smarter and is relying more and more on factors such as bounce rates, time on site, and other 'user experience' type data. In my mind, the Search Engine of the future (whatever or whoever that might be), will be a highly evolved machine that ranks sites heavily based on USER EXPERIENCE. This is likely the hardest thing for an SEO'er to manipulate, and it makes sense that a smart SE would key in on it. Now, don't get me wrong, Content is STILL king, and on-site optimization, backlinks, and a sprinkle SEO 'magic' here and there all play a clutch role. And, if done right, can still get you to the top of the SE's...for now. I guess the moral of the story is that websites that offer no real value (affiliate or otherwise) have got their work cut out for them. |
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Good to know. |
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They have an online marketing bachelors and master's program. :winkwink: |
:thumbsup :thumbsup
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Hey baddog - GREAT post man! Quick question tho:
I run a network of 18 paysites, and I just switched to a dedicated hosting plan. I've left some of lesser-performing sites on the old hosting (which is a shared account). All my sites are currently linked together, with no outside link trades. (See here: www.misterpeabodyworld.com) So just wondering if I should take every site in the network and get seperate hosting for each one? Or would just having the two hosts do? The idea of getting eighteen differant hosts, especially now that I've just switched to dedicated hosting ($500 a month, btw, as opposed to $20 a month for a shared account) seems daunting. Thanks!! |
Useful link for basics on Search Engine Optimization http://bit.ly/cDmwyp
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I was talking about a real school lol. |
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Anyway, thanks! |
that was very informative, thanks for taking the time to write it up.
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They are an accredited university, I do know that much. Here's the link to the Master's Program: http://www.fullsail.edu/online/degre...keting-masters |
Very cool, thanks for the read. :)
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syc·o·phant (sĭk'ə-fənt, sī'kə-) n. A servile self-seeker who attempts to win favor by flattering influential people. [Latin sȳcophanta, informer, slanderer, from Greek sūkophantēs, informer, from sūkon phainein, to show a fig (probably originally said of denouncers of theft or exportation of figs) : sūkon, fig + phainein, to show; see bhā-1 in Indo-European roots.] syc'o·phan'tic (-fān'tĭk), syc'o·phan'ti·cal (-tĭ-kəl) adj., syc'o·phan'ti·cal·ly adv. |
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I do "host crowding". I have 20 sites on one IP, and more than half of them are very similar. G has not penalized me and I have good placement on some decent keywords. I do get nervous sometimes about the sandbox although I fear algorithym rewrites more.
As to losing key #1 & #2 placements, that has happened to me in the past and it was one site on one IP on a shared host. G just decided my site and many like it just wasn't relevant any more. |
Good post, I've got my sites spread out over class c's on dedicated IP's, I'm no seo expert but I'm a believer that it helps. I do take issue with the following quote (if Ive missed any clarification in further posts, forgive me, I didn't read past page 1)
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Maybe google treats the super competitive terms differently or it wont return 2 of the same results from same server in top 10 or something, I don't know. I do believe host crowding plays a role but it's not as simple as stated, especially with the less competitive terms. |
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baddog can you hit me on icq, wanna bang heads for a few mins :thumbsup
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Top 100 ??
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Thanks Baddog, It answers a lot of questions I had about SEO.. Always like to read your posts..
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Very good post will.
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some other guys really help here, thanks for a nice thougt:)hs
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if u want seo hosting stay away from yellow fiber
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How many of you "SEO Hosts" use the same DNS for each client / domain unless they ask how to make them private?
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