Thursday, October 26, 2006

InfoSearch Media & ContentLogic - Purveyors of Falsehoods

 

Posted by randfish

I spent some time on the phone today with William Stinson from InfoSearch Media (link condom applied). They had cold called an old client (and friend) of mine who referred them to us. I spent a good 20 minutes chatting with William to attempt to understand their business model and their services. I took a few notes from our phone conversation - here's what InfoSearch Media had to say:

  • Google currently uses LSI as a big part of their ranking algorithm (which is a load of bull)
  • The perfect length for an article to rank well is between 200-250 words; any shorter and the search engines don't have enough material any longer and they start to get confused (no seriously that's almost verbatim what he said)
  • Text content is the primary metric on which search engines base their rankings - links while important are a smaller part of the equation
  • InfoSearch Media was named "best content writer" by TopSEOs.com - apparently they're also an "official sponsor" - can you say "conflict of interest"? Luckily the press release didn't reveal that information.

William had evidence to back this up too. He showed off a few clients:

  • This page ranks #3 for "kobe beef steaks delivered" thanks to the great article that Infosearch wrote for Allen Brothers.
  • This one ranks #1 for "organic dark roast coffee" once again due to the brilliant article writing. William told me that if they had opted for the full package of 400 article they could probably rank for "coffee." (more on that gem later)
  • This page ranks #1 for "buy hard drives" - they can rank well for these competitive terms because Infosearch wrote so many great articles for them not because they're NewEgg... right? (BTW - the "article" they wrote that's helping the page rank is at the bottom of all the products - it's "not for users.")

I literally felt like I was on a phone call to crazyland. I tried asking William to explain the logic behind why Google would want to rank a site higher simply because they had more articles on a subject than another and we came back to LSI. Then I received the following from them through email (after our call had ended):

Hi Rand-

Here is the info I was referring to about LSI and Google:

How Does Google Use Latent Semantic Indexing (LSI)? Latent Semantic Indexing (LSI) helps Google and others maintain relevancy by distinguishing in search results between polynyms words with multiple meanings ...
www.wilsonweb.com/seo/google-lsi.htm

 Also my manger sent me this email after we spoke about Google:

“I just came back from the WebMaster World Conference in LV. I spoke with a man who recently worked for Google. He explained to me that Google is restructuring their algorithm to align more closely with LSI. Many people have been noticing a wide shuffle in search relevancy scores recently. Some of those well in the know attribute this to latent semantic indexing which Google has been using for a while but recently increased its weighting.”

When I told William I was speaking at WMW Vegas next week he told me that his manager "was quoting a blog he read."

Contentlogic.com 

Contentlogic (the Infosearch service I was being pitched) says on their homepage that article content (like the type they offer) is the best way to achieve high search engine rankings. They excerpt a quote from Mary O'Brien (formerly of Overture) when the actual article Mary wrote is a near-perfect argument against the kind of "write-for-engines-not-users" philosophy that's embodied in their services.

It's not that their services are bad - they COULD be valuable to the right company in the right place. The writing is good quality and the subject matter isn't awful it's just that they go about promoting it in such a horribly manipulative shyster-like style that it's hard to take anything they say seriously. It makes me sick - no wonder there's articles like this and this about SEO. With these guys as role models we're going to be thought of as bottom feeders for a long time to come.

p.s. Obviously (as with all things in the blogosphere and on SEOmoz) the above represents my opinions. If you're curious about whether I've got the right to say these types of things without fear of legal retribution check out this guide to defamation as it relates to blogging.

View Comments


  posted by Smile Community @ 10:07 PM

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

 

Search


Web W-master

Home

Previous Post

*Added Forum for Anaconda Theme

*Still Not Thinking About Accessibility? Maybe a La...

*How to Generate High Quantities of Content for You...

*When Google Search Fails

*250 Best Movies Made in the Last 30 Years

*34 Tips for Finding Readers for Your Blog

*It's Not About the Changing Algos

*Ten Grammar Errors that Could be Haunting Your Blog

*moo offers 10 Free Skype Calling Cards

*Are You Tired Of Search Marketing?

Archives

*February 2006

*March 2006

*April 2006

*May 2006

*August 2006

*September 2006

*October 2006

*November 2006

*December 2006

Partner Links

Best Offers

RSS Feeds

TOP Blog Links

BlogOmg >> The Best and Most Popular Blogs
Ping Your Blog!
Name:
URL:
Powered By: PingTheEmpire.com