Dear Google: Was I bitchslapped for blogging about PPP?!
Did Google bitch-slapping my blog for just using the words Pay Per Post, ReviewMe, Payu2Blog and other paid companies?!? Even though a blog hasn’t run a single post from these companies? !!!! ??? !!!!
Of course, it’s not as though I can ask Google to tell me. But, from Ted Murphy’s fingers, I learn this:
We now know from some of our friends inside of Google (thanks “bob”) that they are now looking for phrases such as PPP, PayPerPost,ReviewMe, Payu2blog, etc. in the text of your post. For that reason I would suggest refraining from using any type of this text in the body of your posts, sponsored or not. When you disclose thank the sponsor, not PPP.
Not mention these companies names!?
Of course I also mention these company names constantly. I even joined them all. After all, my niche is creating plugins that help bloggers who monetize do so. Joining the programs is essential to developing appropriate tools for these bloggers and understanding which features are useful.
But if Google’s blog could actually detect followed paid links they realize I have none from these companies!
In fact, if the Google meisters had any brains, they’d figure out one of many of my plugins are of inestimable value to their search engine.
Google meisters might ask, like what?
No Follow Old Spam Links:
You know what this does?
If a paid blogger runs paid a paid link, they can automatically no follow them after the contract period expires. That’s right: the links switch “no follow” after a set number of days. (The blogger can pick. I think I set mine to 60 days).
Sure, I know Google might not be thrilled with temporary follows, but sheesh! Your ‘bot is constantly crawling. Don’t you think it can’s see these things go “off”? The two I posted way, way, way back went off long, long ago. (Like earlier than May or at worst June!)
Guess what Google. Other bloggers use my plugin. Their “nofollows” turn on after a number of days.
So Am I supposed to never say Pay Per Post?!
Now assuming I lost page rank for posing the words Pay Per Post. What the heck amd I supposed to do if I want my rank back?
Andy Beard describes how I can request re-inclusion in Google’s ranking system. Evidently, I’m supposed to figure out what I did wrong (by guessing) and then undo it.
So… is mentioning PPP a violation of the guidelines? Am I supposed to delete thoese evil words, promise never to type PPP, Izea, Social Spark, PayU2Blog, ReviewMe or Loud Launch, ever again, and then ask Google if they’ll consider giving me page rank?!
Seriously?!
Oh, and if I can’t say these words, can others? Like, say the guys at TechCrunch, who seem to be permitted to say “Pay Per Post” with impunity?!
Hey, if Google wants to bitchslap me for posting the words Pay Per Post, Izea, Social Spark, or whatever, I guess they can do so. But … well.. sheesh!
Tags:bloggers monetize PayPerPost search engine google ted murphyRelated Posts:
- Do PPP and Google Agree About Something? Contests entry posts are not "free"!
- The Secret to Organizing Posts while Complying with PPP Best Practices
- Warning: Don't Back Date PPP Posts!
- Pay Per Post: No back to back sponsored posts.
Comments
Dear Google: Was I bitchslapped for blogging about PPP?! was posted on November 19, 2007 - Filed Under Blogging Google PayPerPost Rankings SEO |Do PPP and Google Agree About Something?
Contests entry posts are not “free”!
Contests entry posts are not “free”!
Yes. It appears the Pay Per Post and Google may very well agree about something! They may end up using different words, but when it appears they both think that posts written in order to gain a chance at winning a valuable prize are not freely given links.
In the case of Google: The blogger who offers the prize could get a severe Google penalty.
In the case of PPP: A blogger will not be paid for any PPP post flanked by the “contests” post.
So, yep, PPP and Google agree! These posts are kinda-sorta “paid”, “sponsored” or “not freely given” and will be treated as such. Now, for some details!
Pay Per Post’s Reaction to Contest Posts
Recently, PayPerPost rejected a post written by Joanna, of Nanashi-inc.net. The reason? Her PPP sponsored posts was placed next to a post that contained a link to a contest for an IPOD; the link served in place of an entry fee.
The problem? The PPP TOS prohibit posting a PPP post next to any sponsored post and PPP considers these “contests entrace fee” posts sponsored.
Google’s Reaction to Contest Posts
A short while back, Dave Airey decided to run a blog contest. He offered a prize; the entrance fee for the contest was a blog post that linked to Dave’s blog.
Soon after, Dave noticed he’d suffered a severe Google penalty; Matt Cutt’s mentioned the contest when explaining the penalty.
Luckily for Dave, he was able to ask his readers to delete the links. After they did, he regained his Google rank!
Similarities!
Notice the IPOD contest run by It’s Write Now Dave Airey’s contesnt. To enter the contest, both require a blog post with a link back to the contests’ blogs.
So, it would appear that both Google and PPP consider these sorts of “contest entry” blog posts with their links to be motivated by some sort of reward, bribe, or what have you. Of course, each business responds differently.
PPP accepts sponsored posts as an entirely valid option for blogs. However, they prohibit bloggers from placing these sorts of contest posts adjacent to PPP’s clients’ posts. So, PPP’s response is to not pay the blogger for the invalid post.
In contast, Google doesn’t like sponsored posts at all. If they detect the contest, they will apply a Google penalty to the blogger who runs the contest. We don’t entirely know whether they will penalize the bloggers who enter the contest. But since Google seems to see these links as unnatural, it seems there is some risk Google might do so.
The irony
If you read the IPOD contest rules carefully, you’ll notice I just wrote a post that qualifies me to enter the contest! Would PPP consider this post sponsored? Would Google? Hmmmm….
Tags:monetize PayPerPost sponsored posts
Related Posts:
- Dear Google: Was I bitchslapped for blogging about PPP?!
- The Secret to Organizing Posts while Complying with PPP Best Practices
- Warning: Don't Back Date PPP Posts!
- Pay Per Post: No back to back sponsored posts.
Comments
Do PPP and Google Agree About Something? Contests entry posts are not “free”! was posted on October 24, 2007 - Filed Under Blogging PayPerPost Monetize |Arrington: Distorts the Truth Trying to Make PPP Look Bad!
It’s pretty sad when you hate someone or something so much that you seem to create “facts” to bolster your negative opinion of them. It appears Mike Arrington did that in his recent screed entitled: PayPerPost Abuses Declining Job Candidate.
Relying on information contained in Arrington’s story, posts at the PPP board, and the “candidates” clarification in comments it appears the truth is: Pretty bad reporting. Arrington’s story isn’t just an opinion I disagree with. It isn’t just biased reporting of things that actually happened. It is an attempted hatchet job on PPP that relies on manufactured, entirely false “facts”, which could be uncovered easily. You betcha’! Let’s look at the numerous specific details that Arrington got wrong: Nope, this didn’t happen. Lori Friend-Smiles did not forward a Salberg’s email to anyone. This may seem a trivial error on Arrington’s part, but remember: Many consider a head hunter forwarding private email to a third party professional malpractice. So, to “break” this story, Arrington unfairly, and falsely besmirched Lori Smiles’s professional reputation. How did I unearth the truth? Lawrence Salberg volunteered this information in a comment posted at Techcrunch, saying “As far as I know, Lori (referred to as the ‘headhunter’ by many here) did not forward the email to PPP. I copied PPP (to their general email info box) in my response.” Presumably, if Mike Arrington had asked Lawrence how Peter Wright obtained the email, Mike would have “uncovered” this tid-bit of information! (But as we shall see, that would have dramatically changed Arrignton’s later accusations!) In any case, given the nature of most company general email info boxes, Salberg the “job candidate” basically sent an a abusive email to the general inbox at PPP, where its remarkable contents, containing personal attacks on every employee must have circulated quickly. This is false in two regards. First, Peter Wright responded to an email sent by Salberg to PPP. No one considers responding email sending “unsolicited email” In fact, when I send email to a company’s general contact box, I hope to get an answer! Second… “on going email exchange”? That sure makes it sound like Peter Wright is holed up in his office, neglecting important PPP work and wasting time exchanging email with Salberg, right? That would fit right in with Mike’s constant talking claim that PPP management wastes time on silly things. In fact, the exchange of email was not “on going” at the time Mike published. Peter appears to have responded to Salbergs first email to PPP. Salberg then sent Peter another vitrolic email where Salberg further argues his position with prose consisting of statements like “Blah, blah, blah….” (That’s really a quote, which prefaces a rather snide paragraph.). Peter appears to have ignored the second email by Salberg and is continuing to ignore the man. When Peter did not answer, it appears that Lawrence Salberg, may have wished to find some means to continue the conversation. After all, somehow, Mr. Salberg’s email managed to come to the attention of Mike Arrington. (Though Arrington, relying on passive voice, avoids telling us who sent him the email. ) So, the truth: The only “on going” aspect of the email exchange was that “someone” not associated with PPP was forwarding the email to Arrington! (Update 9/25/00: In comments, Salberg says he did not wait until Peter Wright failed to respond to his email response. He pro-actively blindcopied Arrington on his response to Peter Wright, so Arrington received it at the same time as Peter, the timestamp indicated in the PDF is 1:57 PM PDT; the meta data indicates Arrington’s post was published at 10:14 pm. ) Well, I guess whether or not a response is an attack is a matter of opinion. But let’s examine the exchange, a portion of which is available here: In the letter Salberg zinged off to PPP, Salberg said this: Quite frankly, who WOULD want to work in a place like that? Only kids with no brains, no education, no self-confidence and who want to write letters home to mommy and daddy telling them about their great job (read: paycheck) at some “cool” web company”. And However, you didn’t say there [sic] were a modern day cotton-picking farm and that employees are to be viewed as the “negros” out pickin in the fields. Salberg’s entirely unsolicited email to PPP contains additional barbs which many would consider inflammatory. Peter Wright responds by defending his staff, saying: .. I take offense at that. We have an incredibly talented team of people here, programmers w ho have developed stunning technology the likes of which you have never seent before. You’ll see them when we release Argus in August in November. We have ex-military programmers, specialists in data forensics, published authors and speakers, highly popular open source tools authors - the list goes on and on. Smart people. Brilliant people. This, dear readers, is the sort of conversation Mike Arrington characterizes as Peter, of PayPerPost, “attacking” Lawrence the “engineer”. This appears to be far from the truth. To be a “declining candidate”, a candidate must have an offer. The reality is: PPP never extended an offer to Salberg. But it gets better. After all: To be a “job candidate” the company must at least consider you for a position. Did PPP ever consider Salberg? Did they even know he existed? It appears not. In discussion at the Postie board, Peter Wright (aka Froogle) reveals:
Can I demonstrate Arrington’s “facts” are just flat out wrong?
Also we never interviewed him, or phone screened him. He was merely pointed at the sites by a recruiter to see if he wanted them to push him here for interview. First I heard of the guy was when I got his email.
Peter’s assessment is consistent with what we read in the email exchanges Arrington supplied with his post. In those, we read Lori Smalls, asking Salberg:
“Please take a good look at a few episodes of “www.rockstartup.com” and then let me know if you would like to move forward with Pay Per Post.
Salberg was “a candidate” in the sense that Lori, a busy, but friendly, recruiter, read PPP’s job posting, read Salberg’s resume and thought she might be able to get PPP to consider him as a candidate.
I’m sorry, Mike, but that means Salberg was not a PPP job candidate!
Well, Salberg is not an engineer; in comments at Techcrunch, he describes himself this way: “I’m not an engineer. Just a web developer / designer very normal average guy.” At his blog, he describes himself as “The Small Business Expert”; his most recent is “Sticky Notes Finally Good for Something”.
Of course, Mike Arrington may have this bit right: Salberg is likely still on the job market.
Lessons Mike Should Learn
Mike: It’s never professional to run a controversial story without checking the facts. It’s never professional to smear a third party professional reputation without checking the facts. It’s never professional to appear to be trying your darndest to be carrying out a hatchet job on a company that compete for your revenue stream: that is, advertising dollars.
And, if you really think Lawrence Salberg is a smart engineer, maybe you should hire him. Because after this, I doubt anyone is going to take your staffing recommendations seriously! Tags:Arrington PayPerPost techcrunch
Related Posts:
- Dear Google: Was I bitchslapped for blogging about PPP?!
- Do PPP and Google Agree About Something? Contests entry posts are not "free"!
- The Secret to Organizing Posts while Complying with PPP Best Practices
- Warning: Don't Back Date PPP Posts!
Comments
Arrington: Distorts the Truth Trying to Make PPP Look Bad! was posted on September 24, 2007 - Filed Under PayPerPost |older posts »