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LED Digest 2292: AdWords - Scam and Exploitation? Print E-mail
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List Moderator:                     Published by:
Adam Audette                          LED Digest
adam, led-digest.com     http://www.led-digest.com
..............................................
November 20, 2006                    Issue no. 2292
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            .....IN THIS DIGEST.....
                

====== NEW ======================

        --== Is AdWords a Scam & Exploitation? ==--

                ~ Roger Hass
"20,000 business types represented on
101,435,253 Web sites..."


==== CONTINUING =================

        --== Marketing Exclusivity ==--

                ~ Tim Klimasewski
"So we limit the period of the non-compete to
2 years after our work has been completed."

        --== Buying Links ==--

                ~ Michael Linehan
"It all looks a bit iffy - something that may
end up biting you in the rear."

                ~ Jerry Harvey
"Matt Cutts says you shouldn't buy links.
Enough said."

        --== Getting Sued for SEO Work ==--

                ~ Ian Parker
"I would like to add my comments to the list
of those who advocate that you defend..."


==== BILLBOARD ===================

        --== New Member Intro ==--
                ~ Shel Horowitz


========== NEW ====================================

From: Roger Hass
Subject: SEO - Is it a Scam and Exploitation?

G'Day Folks,

SEO --  Is it a Scam and Exploitation of your Greed, What do you
think? (This should put the Cat amongst the Pigeons)

Topic Introduction:

To understand the phenomenal growth factor of web pages worldwide,
here are some figures to consider. Back in March 2004 (now ancient
history) it was estimated that approx 43 million web sites existed.*

(* Source http://www.boutell.com/newfaq/misc/sizeofweb.html )

This was based on Google information of "Google states that they are
indexing 4,285,199,774 distinct web pages." And divided by the
average number of pages per site of  "Dividing Google's figure of
4.28 billion by 100 gives us roughly 43 million sites."

Estimating the current number of actual web sites (not pages
indexed) is a little harder as the hype on the Internet is so full
of it, that the "full of it" would feed all of the Rose Gardens in
England for the next Century.

In June 2005 it was estimated that approx 64.8 million web sites existed.*

(* Source
http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2005/06/01/june_2005_web_server_survey.html )

Survey quote from that source...

-------------------------
"In the June 2005 survey we received responses from 64,808,485
sites, an increase of 1.27 million from last month's survey. In the
first six months of the year, the Internet has added 7.83 million
sites, a pace which approaches the torrid growth rate of 2000, when
the Web added 16.1 million sites. By comparison, the survey added
10.4 million sites in 2003 and 10.9 million in 2004.

"The bulk of this year's growth has occurred in the United States,
with a gain of 5.14 million hostnames. Other countries with strong
growth in the survey thus far in 2005 include Germany (+575K), The
United Kingdom (+436K), South Korea (+237.9K) and Sweden (+143K)."
-------------------------

To bring this information up to date, the November 2006 figures from
the same source suggests that there are now 101,435,253 web sites on
the Internet. All these figure, I suggest, are only a very crude
estimate of the actual number and by the time I have finished
writing this, many sites will have come and gone. However, I must
remark that I have found the figures from "Netcraft" to be more
accurate than most others.

SEO - Page Ranking and Related Services, including the new "AdWords"
Stock Exchange.

I will make this simple for you all to understand.

1. On any Search Engine result, there are only 10 (ten) listed
results per page.

2. It is considered by most that it is an advantage to be listed in
the first 3 page which is equal to 30 places within this result. -
OK so far?

Now considering that in the English Language there are approximately
171,476 known words and not all are used as 47,156 are obsolete.*

(* Source
http://www.askoxford.com/asktheexperts/faq/aboutenglish/numberwords )

Quote:

-------------------------
"The Second Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary contains full
entries for 171,476 words in current use, and 47,156 obsolete words.
To this may be added around 9,500 derivative words included as
subentries. Over half of these words are nouns, about a quarter
adjectives, and about a seventh verbs; the rest is made up of
interjections, conjunctions, prepositions, suffixes, etc. These
figures take no account of entries with senses for different parts
of speech (such as noun and adjective)."
-------------------------

So, for the benefit of the sceptics, let's say that with the new
Computer and IT Industry jargon we will allow (add) another 50,000
jargon words to the result.

171,476 - 47,156 - 9,500 + 50,000 = 164,820 words on the "Adwords
Stock Exchange" at say 10 cents a word = $16,482.00 to be made from
all the fools that would purchase them, not a bad money spinner for
the "Conmen" to exploit.

Next to consider is the categories / types and classes of businesses
on the Web relating to different segments of businesses services on
the internet with Web sites. This got out of hand with each state in
the USA and other Countries giving and using different words
(interpretations) in their results, so I went to the UN
Classifications Registry to try my luck (besides suddenly going off
air for maintenance until Sunday) and that's where I stopped as it
got so confusing that, I think, if we started a discussion on this
subject we would bring the house down.

So for the purpose of the exercise, lets just say that there are at
least 60,000 different Job and business types, who said 100,000 ? OK
lets say 100,000 then.

This of course means that 100.000 types of businesses are
represented in 101,435,253 web sites, attempting to fight over
164,820 Adword(s) to get top ranking on the first 3 pages (30
places) of the Search Engine results.

OK, lets word this differently and see if it sounds better (old
marketing ploy = re-package it in a bubble pack) and it sounds like
this;

Each of the 100,000 types of Business groups, are represented by
1,014 web sites competing for your business and all attempting to
get in the first 30 places of a search engine, giving odds of approx
33:1 -- "Good odds or Not Bad, you say?"

Read my Lips Folks! Anything sounds better when we have manipulated
the word usage and pull the wool over your eyes when your mind
thinks of "Getting Rich Quick" methods. -- "There is no get rich
method, the only people getting rich are those that get you to pay
for their Get Rich Schemes."

Here is the Punch Line Folks - The Facts!

Unfortunately there are not 100,000 Business classes or groups,
unless you want to dissect Jobs, Businesses Types and Services into
specialised field, e.g. A Plumber now becomes, 1. a Tap Plumber, 2.
a Pipe Plumber, 3, a Sink Plumber, etc. "A Plumber is a Plumber,
unless you think you can find a Toilet Plumber."

The reality is (just look at your local Business Directory, they
have used the bubble pack ploy on it) you will find approximately
only 13,545 Types of Businesses, even if I'm kind and up that to
*20,000 the result still looks bad and not good for the bottom line.

My calculations are as follows, using the inflated *20,000 number:

20,000 business types represented on 101,435,253 web Sites. This
means that there are 5,072 web sites for each Business Type
attempting to get a top 30 listing on any Search Engine result.
Makes this odds of 169:1 that they might succeed, while they fight
over 164,820 possible Adword(s) trying to get there!

You can do your own cost estimates on this by going to the Google
Traffic Estimator Link:
https://adwords.google.com/select/TrafficEstimatorSandbox and
perform your own word search and get the cost estimate, just
remember that you only stay on top with a Adword until someone
outbids you on it.

Here is the result of what it would cost per day to have the word
"Computer" as your Adword:

- Keyword: Computer

- Estimated Avg. CPC: $2.80 - $4.16

- Estimated Ad Positions: 1 - 3

- Estimated Clicks/Day: 34,442 - 43,086

- Estimated Cost/Day: $96,490 - $179,390

Yes Folks, this is correct, it can cost you between $96,490 and
$176,390 PER DAY!

Remember the story of "Cinderella" the shoe only fitted on one foot,
although thousands where attempted!

More interesting reading

- http://www.bricklin.com/smallbusiness.htm

- http://my.execpc.com/~helberg/statistics.html

Best Advertising by far is "Word of Mouth."

Good luck with your SEO, when I use specific search term such as
"PC-Bug Fixer" I'm always on top. Try a search for your web site
name (without the www and extension) and you get top ranking.

Now think about what I tried to tell you and why I think that all
the hype on SEO and Adword optimization is no more that a "Scam and
Exploitation."

Point 1. - I'm in Sydney, Australia, so I doubt if anyone from the
USA or England is going to send or bring me their "Computer" to my
work shop to service it.

Point 2. - Why would I now need top ranking on an International
Search Result?

Point 3. - Ask yourself these two questions before you get sucked up
with all the hype.

Point 4. - Remember that having a Web Site, is no guaranty of
Success or Instant Riches.

Point 5. - Business success starts by doing a better job and giving
better service than your competitors!

Point 6. -  A Customers recommendation is worth a $10,000 Commercial
Advertisement.

Point 7. -  There is no substitute for "Word of Mouth Advertisement."

Roger Hass
pcbugfixer.com

<Moderator Comment>

Couple quick comments so others don't have to correct you:

- AdWords is a PPC market, it's not SEO;

- SEO techniques are mostly used to achieve natural (organic) search
rankings;

- your example of "computer" is an extremely competitive single
keyword. The art of PPC is finding less competitive terms and
phrases. Simple supply and demand. There are endless niches where
this is available to the creative.

- when you consider keyword phrases rather than just single words,
you realize the amount of possible combinations is truly endless.
Plus targeted phrases will usually convert much better than single
keywords;

Still, an interesting post that reveals some common complaints about
the PPC model.

(I think you really summed up what Web business is about with your
Point 5, BTW.)

Best wishes,
Adam


======== CONTINUING ===============================

From: Tim Klimasewski
Subject: Marketing exclusivity

> Once you work with a marketing vendor you would expect
> them to NEVER, EVER, EVER work for a competitor? ... Would
> anyone care to explain their thoughts and why they believe
> this is a legitimate request?
        - Leah Driver, LED Digest 2291
        - http://www.led-digest.com/content/view/1365/55/

I had originally posted about limiting marketing vendors from doing
similar work for competitors. We have a standard consulting
agreement for that purpose. But you are correct that US courts
assert the rights of individuals to work and make money in their
chosen field. That is where non-competes become gray, as has been
pointed out. So we limit the period of the non-compete to 2 years
after our work has been completed.

The legitimacy of any non-compete is based on the ownership of the
knowledge gained during the engagement. When I pay someone for
internet marketing help, they need to learn about my business:
customer personas, keywords, etc. We do testing. We learn what works
and what doesn't. There is a cost associated with this work and this
is what I am paying for.

All I am saying is that it would be unfair for a vendor to take the
specific knowledge that has already been paid for and sell it to
someone else, either during the engagement or soon after. We have
determined that period to be 2 years.

Tim Klimasewski
www.spectracomcorp.com


-------- new post - new topic --------

From: Michael Linehan
Subject: Buying links

Andy Hagans of Text Link Ads, and also "review ME" which launched
last week, just participated in a forum at WebmasterWorld's Search
Engine & Internet Marketing Conference currently on. In a summary
report it was stated,

--------------------
"What can happen to me for buying links? Your site can get kicked
out of the SE's. Your ranking is approximately 30 positions worse...
this is a new "minus thirty penalty" that apparently is related to
buying links, according to recent forum and blog discussions. Also,
if you are ranking for anything except the targeted term, then you
may have been the victim of a penalty on a single terms. For
example, if you are targeting 'water bottles,' but do not have
rankings for that but do rank for 'cheap water bottles.'

"In QA, Thomas says that he feels that Google has directly penalized
some sites including his own that used Text Link Ads. Andy says that
typically what they see is that sites that have already gained a
fair amount of trust prior to buying links can do very well doing
this. However, sites that are newer may run into problems."
--------------------

So even Andy Hagans is stating multiple cautions.  It all looks a
bit iffy - something that may end up biting you in the rear. My hit
on it is that it's like going to a networking meeting at your local
Chamber. Then you pay a few people to talk about how great you are.
It might work for a little while, but sooner or later the house of
cards will come tumbling.  "Real" reputation building, I think, will
be better for any serious business in the long run.

Michael Linehan, Marketing Alchemy
www.marketing-alchemy.com


-------- new post - same topic --------

From: Jerry Harvey
Subject: Buying links

Dear Adam,

Matt Cutts says you shouldn't buy links. Enough said.

Kind regards,

Jerry Harvey
FiveTone Online Boutique


-------- new post - new topic --------

From: Ian Parker
Subject: Sued over SEO Work

I would like to add my comments to the list of those who advocate
that you defend rather than settle.

Anyone providing professional services has the right to do so
freely, and unless you are obliged under contract to exclude certain
other parties, then it is clearly your right to do so, or we would
all see ourselves excluding whole sectors of the market because we
have already done business with client A.

I could not imagine the giants of this world such as AT&T or Google
putting up with this, neither should you.

Providing that you apply equal professionalism to each of your
clients, and the fact that the rankings themselves are totally
outside of your professional domain, would to me at least indicate
that you certainly do have the right to freely trade with whomever
you please.

Ian Parker
http://www.parker-joseph.co.uk


==== BILLBOARD ===================================

From: Shel Horowitz
Subject: New Member Intro

I've been reading LED for a few weeks and see many familiar faces
from I-Sales and other defunct Adventive lists. What a wonderful
community they formed, and I'm delighted to discover that one thread
of it remains. I was never on LED and only found this out when Adam
joined a list that I'm on.

My slogan is "I make the world insist on knowing why *you're*
special. As a copywriter and marketing consultant, I look for
affordable, ethical, and effective ways to differentiate my clients
in a sometimes very crowded world. And while I do the occasional
salesletter, I tend to specialize in quieter, less hypey forms of
copywriting: press releases, media pitch letters, web pages (just
the writing, not the coding), e-mail signatures, and so forth. I
look to tell "the story behind the story" -- copy that actually holds
a reader's attention and is a far cry from the boring press release
we see far too often.

As an example, I was hired to write a press release for a book on
electronic privacy. Instead of the boring, expected "Electronic
Privacy Expert Releases New Book," my headline was "It's 10 O'Clock
-- Do You Know Where Your Credit History Is?"

I also write books about marketing; my three most recent are
Grassroots Marketing for Authors and Publishers (forthcoming in
early 2007), Grassroots Marketing: Getting Noticed in a Noisy World
-- and the book I hope will change the world, Principled Profit:
Marketing That Puts People First.

PrinProfit is a big-picture strategic thinking book about how to:

* Use the power of your own principled, ethical business practices
as a lever toward greater profitability

* Turn customers and even competitors into brand evangelists for you

* Develop win-win partnerships with complementary businesses

* Understand why market share doesn't actually matter to a lot of
us, and use that understanding to further business growth

Examples range from home-based entrepreneurs on up to FedEx, Saturn,
and other major corporations. The book is endorsed by dozens of
prominent entrepreneurs and marketers, among them Jack Canfield of
Chicken Soup, Jay Conrad Levinson of Guerrilla Marketing, and quite
a few people I know from the Adventive communities (among them John
Audette, Martha Retallick, B.L. Ochman, Keith Thirgood, and Eva
Rosenberg (all of which and many more can be seen on the website).

If you get the sense that I'm bragging, it's because I'm really
proud of this one. I think it's a groundbreaking book that could
shift the culture.

In tandem with the book, I've also started an international pledge
campaign to create a positive, ethical business climate - the goal
is to get 25,000 who will each tell at least 100, and reach a
tipping point -- ten year timetable. Signers from 25 countries so
far: http://www.business-ethics-pledge.org (This is something I was
inspired to do in part due to the success of a local environmental
organization I started, which successfully beat back a particularly
badly conceived development project abutting a local park, after all
the "experts" told us it was a terrible project but it couldn't be
stopped).

Those who know me from before will not be surprised to learn that
I've got my finger in a lot of other pies. I'm operating something
like 9 websites, of which the ones that get the bulk of my attention
are http://www.frugalmarketing.com , http://www.principledprofit.com
, and http://www.grassrootsmarketingforauthors.com -- as well as
three monthly newsletters, two of which (Frugal Marketing Tips and
Frugal fun Tips) date all the way back to 1997.  Pretty much all the
web maintenance stuff is handled by a virtual assistant I've never
met, who lives in Alaska (I live in a 1743 farmhouse in rural
Massachusetts) -- before I hired her in 1999 or 2000, I did it
myself but I only had two sites.

I've also just started a sideline venture finding good domains for
people, serve on my town's Long Range Planning Implementation
Committee, just did a community theatre play, do some speaking and
publishing consulting... okay, that's enough, I'll stop there.

Shel Horowitz
http://www.frugalmarketing.com


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