The Google Slap is a term used unaffectionately by
mainly small businesses that rely on AdWords accounts through Google to drum up
business for their sites. AdWords for Google allows people to have their
advertisements for their own businesses on pages with keywords or subjects that
relate to their products. Normally people who hold AdWords accounts pay per
each time someone clicks on their ad, usually at about $.05-.10 US Dollars
(USD) per click.
However, if Google finds or determines that the
page that potential customers visit when they click on the ad is not related,
is poor in quality, or even loads too slowly, they may take punitive action in
the form of a Google Slap. Basically, the Google Slap accomplishes several
things at once. First, it drives up the price of your pay per click amount,
sometimes asking as much as $10USD per click, which most small vendors cannot
afford to pay. Second, they may reduce your page ranking (PR), which will
automatically mean you have to pay more to have your ads featured through
AdWords.
Google obviously has a right to determine which
pages represent the greatest quality and most match to keywords, but in 2008, a
round of Google Slap actions on small vendors took considerable toll, driving
many companies out of business quickly. Many argued that their pages conformed
to Google’s AdWords recommendations for pages, and yet they still receive very
low PR rankings. This meant the enormously high pay per click fees were
prohibitive, and comparable to banning certain vendors from using AdWords,
though searches for information on these pages might still be revealed in a
regular Google search, just not in ads.
When some companies receive a Google Slap, just
about the only thing they can do is completely change their domain because it
is very difficult to challenge Google on their ratings or assessment of pages.
There are Internet horror stories on known pages, with excellent authoritative
and original information being slapped, and being unable to recover. If you
decide Google AdWords is for you, you should definitely read all information
about what Google looks for to avoid receiving a Google Slap.
A few things that Google consistently appears to
look for include original and significant content on landing pages (the page a
person goes to when they click on your ad), transparent business dealings and
upfront information about how you conduct business, and easy methods for
searching your website from the landing page. To avoid a Google Slap you’ll
want to not create a landing page that is just a table of contents and plenty
of ads for other vendors, and you have to make sure your page conforms to any
of Google’s Editorial Guidelines, too.
If you have received a Google Slap, it can be very
difficult to fight this. Many website experts do recommend that you may want to
discard your current domain name and start over, or look to other ways to
generate traffic to your site. Some people use pay per click ads on alternate
search engines, which can help increase business. In particular, companies like
Yahoo may be better choices for running your ads, if you can’t get Google to
change their opinion of your site.
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