The Moz Q&A Forum

    • Forum
    • Questions
    • My Q&A
    • Users
    • Ask the Community

    Welcome to the Q&A Forum

    Browse the forum for helpful insights and fresh discussions about all things SEO.

    1. SEO and Digital Marketing Q&A Forum
    2. Categories
    3. White Hat / Black Hat SEO
    4. Turn grey myself or rat on black hat competitors?

    Turn grey myself or rat on black hat competitors?

    White Hat / Black Hat SEO
    37 20 4.9k
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as question
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • Phil_
      Phil_ @Andy.Drinkwater last edited by

      Thanks for your rallying words Andy. I am feeling the squeeze and clearly I am struggling in sustaining faith whilst facing the cloaked and the paid. But ok, it's do-able. When you say never black nor grey I presume you mean really 100% white, entirely within the meaning of Google tos. Not even a shade of grey and it's possible to beat really good black hat? Uh oh there I go again!

      Andy.Drinkwater HiveDigitalInc 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Andy.Drinkwater
        Andy.Drinkwater @Phil_ last edited by

        Absolutely 100% white - no shades of grey at all 🙂

        All of my customer sites are SEO'd to match the Google guidelines and don't go close to anything that be classed as remotely grey (or black).

        The things I find make the biggest difference, outside of ensuring the site is up to scratch, is the content. Being a copywriter, I often write entire knowledge bases for customer sites so they have a lot of unique content to share with their customers, via social media sites, to have mentioned in articles, for other sites to link to... the list goes on.

        Part of this is down to the fact it is not written for the search engines, but very strong written words for visitors.

        Many wont understand just what a difference this can make - coupled with a well put together site = good results.

        Regards,

        Andy

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • Goetzman
          Goetzman @Phil_ last edited by

          lol great response Russ. Attack those blackhats with fire!

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • HiveDigitalInc
            HiveDigitalInc @Phil_ last edited by

            Successful SEO's thrive on those who are afraid of taking risks.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -2
            • HiveDigitalInc
              HiveDigitalInc @Dan-Petrovic last edited by

              I just disagree with you. Even at the #1 position, you are missing out on 50+% of the available organic traffic for that keyword. Multi-site strategies are always the right way to go. Seriously, if you really believe that paid linking and black hat link building are dangerous to your and your client's sites, then why in the hell would you have only 1 property that is easily susceptible to a client buying links to and spamming?

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
              • Andy.Drinkwater
                Andy.Drinkwater last edited by

                Seo's that take risks with their customers websites have a number of lessons yet to learn. It's like taking your car to the garage and have someone say "let's see what happens when we try a lesser quality petrol into something that is supposed to take premium" Seo's that are successful are those that can deliver measurable results without putting their customers in danger. It's called good business practice.

                HiveDigitalInc 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • HiveDigitalInc
                  HiveDigitalInc @Andy.Drinkwater last edited by

                  You still think that I am talking about the client's primary site.

                  Look, leave the main site alone - do it all white hat with great content and great links. I am totally on board with that.

                  Buy why not build 3 other sites and use the techniques that work NOW on them? Seriously, can you give me one strong reason why a webmaster should continue to stand by while Google's algorithm's can't keep up with his competitor's spam?

                  You keep running the race with 1 horse, and Ill keep running it with 20. We will see who wins.

                  ClickValueMedia Deacyde 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 5
                  • Andy.Drinkwater
                    Andy.Drinkwater last edited by

                    So here's a silly thought... Why not build all sites with White hat content and techniques that we know work, and then see who wins?

                    Look, at the end of the day, there are those that are successful (very) following all guidelines to a tee, have nothing but a string of successes without ever having to tread on territory that comes even close to unethical.

                    There simply is no need. I am not going to deny that there are black hat techniques that work and might not get found, but why would you take that chance when there is a White hat way of achieving the same results? Results that are going to continue to pay long term.

                    HiveDigitalInc 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • Dan-Petrovic
                      Dan-Petrovic @Dan-Petrovic last edited by

                      Don't get me wrong - We've done both!

                      Creating satellite assets proved to me a nightmare for us on so many levels it's not funny. From using up resources, splitting up time for creating links across multiple sites to client complaining about the look and feel of all these microsites (they treat them as any other site). I've abandoned the method soon after that and put our resources in link, bait, content and whitehat link building. It gave us the results we needed.

                      To be fair I recognise some promotional items operators in Australia who have done microsites really well and benefit from it, however most of them have "fed" juice through the main corporate site. To me this is too close to a scheme for comfort.

                      Another point (this time against the method) is that you're missing out on branding and effectively creating natural links to microsites. If we look at all big brands, their microsites are campaign based. not designed to attract SEO traffic, that's the job of the main site.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • SteveOllington
                        SteveOllington @Dan-Petrovic last edited by

                        Yeah it's annoying that... if Google really do want to discourage bad practise why don't they act on the spam reports. Maybe not all of them but the blatant spam with keywords stuffed all over the place and a million links from spamming forums, etc... by not doing anything about it when somebody is frustrated enough to actually bother to fill in a spam report, just makes that person then decide that what the dodgy site is doing works better... the old "if you can't beat them, join them".

                        Then, like the OP, other SEO's start to think, well why am I sat here slaving away to get anywhere for this client who's putting me under pressure for faster results, when that guy just used xrumer, etc... Maybe I ought to give that a try.

                        G are shooting themselves in the foot. I've "experimented" in darker head-wear realms a lot for that very reason, not because I want to, but because I'm driven to by G's inaction on the matter.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • HiveDigitalInc
                          HiveDigitalInc @Andy.Drinkwater last edited by

                          Can you point out to me a single commercial site, non-fortune 500, ranking in the top 10 for credit cards, mesothelioma, poker, or mortgage that is using solely white hat strategies? Go look at their anchor text profile. Those exact match anchor text links are paid, buddy. One right after the other.

                          conversiontactics 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Gab-Goldenberg
                            Gab-Goldenberg last edited by

                            Are we talking spam automated links, paid links, or something else?

                            If it's spam auto links - they'll get banned sooner or later.

                            If it's paid - read up on how to minimize the risk and jump in. Intermediate sites are one approach.

                            If it's paid - point out the risks of penalties to people selling the links. "OMG, my site can be banned. No wayyyyyy! Why didn't they say so! Nofollow!"

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • ClickValueMedia
                              ClickValueMedia @HiveDigitalInc last edited by

                              Great reply!!!

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • JusinDuff
                                JusinDuff last edited by

                                Don't go grey. Don't rat either because it won't do any good unless many others do the same. Google seems to ignore the one-off requests.

                                Maybe a bit off topic, but I think the bigger problem here is that Search Engines don't reward White Hat practitioners as quickly as they do the Black & Grey Hatters. The latter sees immediate results by manipulating the system and the penalties are not assessed until week, months or even years afterwards.

                                Search Engines have made such great strides in many areas but are still lacking in the penalty department.

                                With search becoming more social, I don't see how SEO and reputation can't do the same. Search Engines should use cues to help trust websites by having developers, designers and SEO's alike "sign" their work. They can attach these sites to their profiles or add a personalized meta tag signature. Having these tags could help Search Engines fight spammy techniques and even offer up suggestions to improve the sites on a more personalized level, without calling anyone out. They can penalize while educating.

                                Netboost 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • Netboost
                                  Netboost @Phil_ last edited by

                                  a good tactic, you can also use these satellites as link laundries. You can indulge all your black and grey hat whims with the disposable sites - because being naughty is just more fun.

                                  The sites that don't get blasted by Google can then be used to dominate the serps and link to your main website (be sure to keep your client's main sites as well as your own whitehat only - it is just plain wrong to use clients as guinea pigs).

                                  I call this technique building a link mountain - the higher it get the whiter it is at the top - but the bottom may be black as obsidian

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • Netboost
                                    Netboost @JusinDuff last edited by

                                    Come on, lets be honest for a sec, most SEOs are in the grayhat area - as essentially linkbuilding is a greyhat practice.

                                    If you are getting links any other way than by creating great content on your site then you are involved in some shade of grey.

                                    ethics has nothing to do with being blackhat, whitehat or greyhat - the only ethics involved is being honest to your clients, and letting them know the full scope of risk for various tactics - if a cleint requests blackhat techniques then I will provide them but only after explaining the risks and putting in place risk mitigation strategies - such as mutliple sites as mentioned above

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • inhouseninja
                                      inhouseninja @Phil_ last edited by

                                      What Russ is talking about here is spot on. If you're not using "micro-sites" to test and rank you're not going to be able to keep up with the other guys. How are you going to test new methods and learn if you're scared you might enter a "gray" area with google?  Technically, ANY manipulation of Google by manually building links elsewhere is "gray".  SEO, in a sense, is inherently "gray".  So, to claim that your SEO tactics are 100% white-hat is a challenging statement to defend.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • duncan274
                                        duncan274 @Dan-Petrovic last edited by

                                        It's good to hear that it's possible to beat quantity with quality ..any example's would be much appreciated!!!

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • loopyal
                                          loopyal last edited by

                                          Google used to care if you told them about garbage sites.

                                          I never used that against my competitors, but only on blatant spam,

                                          then just over 2 years ago, google stopped listening to my reports.

                                          The spam don't only stay there, it got worse.

                                          After 3 months of them ignoring every request, I gave up reporting them.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • simvegas
                                            simvegas last edited by

                                            You can turn grey but use good original content (don't pollute the internet). Most blackhatters use automatically spun content which is gibberish then submit with automation tools.

                                            {Set yourself a bit more time to create decent handspun content to use with the same automation tools and you will be beating them at their own game.|If you take the time to hand spin some original and quality content, then use those same tools to submit your content you have the ability to beat them with their own tactics.}

                                            😉

                                            InkCartridgesFast 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                            • 1
                                            • 2
                                            • 2 / 2
                                            • First post
                                              Last post
                                            • Competitor Black Hat Link Building?
                                              Linda-Vassily
                                              Linda-Vassily
                                              0
                                              8
                                              188

                                            • Is this a black-hat strategy? If so, what category does this fall under?
                                              MoosaHemani
                                              MoosaHemani
                                              0
                                              3
                                              388

                                            • Definition of Black Hat SEO
                                              RobertFisher
                                              RobertFisher
                                              0
                                              5
                                              2.0k

                                            • White Hat/Black Hat: Incentivized SEO Competition?
                                              MoosaHemani
                                              MoosaHemani
                                              0
                                              2
                                              448

                                            • How to get rid of black hat links?
                                              Carson-Ward
                                              Carson-Ward
                                              0
                                              4
                                              552

                                            • Are these Black Hat Violations? What could happen?
                                              CompleteOffice
                                              CompleteOffice
                                              0
                                              4
                                              751

                                            • Understanding competitors link building tactics (possibly black hat stuff that seems to work)
                                              PeterM22
                                              PeterM22
                                              0
                                              2
                                              651

                                            • What can i do with it? Black hat in my competitors.
                                              TME_Digital
                                              TME_Digital
                                              0
                                              6
                                              1.1k

                                            Get started with Moz Pro!

                                            Unlock the power of advanced SEO tools and data-driven insights.

                                            Start my free trial
                                            Products
                                            • Moz Pro
                                            • Moz Local
                                            • Moz API
                                            • Moz Data
                                            • STAT
                                            • Product Updates
                                            Moz Solutions
                                            • SMB Solutions
                                            • Agency Solutions
                                            • Enterprise Solutions
                                            • Digital Marketers
                                            Free SEO Tools
                                            • Domain Authority Checker
                                            • Link Explorer
                                            • Keyword Explorer
                                            • Competitive Research
                                            • Brand Authority Checker
                                            • Local Citation Checker
                                            • MozBar Extension
                                            • MozCast
                                            Resources
                                            • Blog
                                            • SEO Learning Center
                                            • Help Hub
                                            • Beginner's Guide to SEO
                                            • How-to Guides
                                            • Moz Academy
                                            • API Docs
                                            About Moz
                                            • About
                                            • Team
                                            • Careers
                                            • Contact
                                            Why Moz
                                            • Case Studies
                                            • Testimonials
                                            Get Involved
                                            • Become an Affiliate
                                            • MozCon
                                            • Webinars
                                            • Practical Marketer Series
                                            • MozPod
                                            Connect with us

                                            Contact the Help team

                                            Join our newsletter
                                            Moz logo
                                            © 2021 - 2026 SEOMoz, Inc., a Ziff Davis company. All rights reserved. Moz is a registered trademark of SEOMoz, Inc.
                                            • Accessibility
                                            • Terms of Use
                                            • Privacy