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I just read this over at Moz. It was user generated, but was still worthwhile.
https://moz.com/blog/my-story-how-psd2html-worked-to-have-a-manual-penalty-revoked
This company were obviously spamming before and got busted and hadn't been able to recover from the penalty. Several companies had tried to the process and all failed.
This lady explains how it was that they started completely over and managed to get it done, specifically with the help of Google's first rejection. It showed them 3 seemingly random links, but they stopped and gave it thought and figured out what Google wanted, and it worked.
The first one was obvious and crazy that they thought it could slide, but the 2nd two were insightful. They really analyzed the "intent" behind the links.
The reason I thought this was interesting was because the company was PSD2HTML.com, an obvious EMD style domain and brand name. So any time someone typed their brand as PSD to HTML, Google saw that as link manipulation.
They had to give up a lot of legit and powerful links due to their choice of brand name.
There was a lot of conversation about why some EMD's were getting penalties and some weren't when Penguin first came out. Seems like Google's algorithm shows no mercy and doesn't care if it's legit or not. If your "Brand" name is an EMD, it's manipulative, plain and simple in their eyes.
Can anyone else figure out any other kind of secrets or insights out of this case study we can share and learn from?
https://moz.com/blog/my-story-how-psd2html-worked-to-have-a-manual-penalty-revoked
This company were obviously spamming before and got busted and hadn't been able to recover from the penalty. Several companies had tried to the process and all failed.
This lady explains how it was that they started completely over and managed to get it done, specifically with the help of Google's first rejection. It showed them 3 seemingly random links, but they stopped and gave it thought and figured out what Google wanted, and it worked.
The first one was obvious and crazy that they thought it could slide, but the 2nd two were insightful. They really analyzed the "intent" behind the links.
The reason I thought this was interesting was because the company was PSD2HTML.com, an obvious EMD style domain and brand name. So any time someone typed their brand as PSD to HTML, Google saw that as link manipulation.
They had to give up a lot of legit and powerful links due to their choice of brand name.
There was a lot of conversation about why some EMD's were getting penalties and some weren't when Penguin first came out. Seems like Google's algorithm shows no mercy and doesn't care if it's legit or not. If your "Brand" name is an EMD, it's manipulative, plain and simple in their eyes.
Can anyone else figure out any other kind of secrets or insights out of this case study we can share and learn from?