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Hi, I'm Steve Logan. I'm the Senior Copywriter here at Koozai, and I'm here
to talk about JCPenney and the issue of buying links. Now, JCPenney, in
early 2011, were hit by a massive Google penalty, as a result of being
found to have paid links. This wasn't a small expose either. It wasn't just
in an SEO journal or a blog. It was actually in The New York Times, which
caused quite a stir around the world, causing a PR headache for JCPenney
and an even bigger one for Google.
As a result, JCPenney were hit by a massive penalty. As Google
always say, this is a 30 day minimum, although JCPenney did bounce back
rather quickly from their penalty. But the big problem, obviously, was that
rather than being a small company using paid links to gain a short-term
advantage, this was a major brand who was actually using paid links to try
and get up the rankings in time for Christmas.
Now, they achieved this because back in Christmas 2010, JCPenney
were at the top for a lot of key terms that they were targeting. This was
the same in January and, obviously, February until they were found out by
The New York Times.
Now the issue for a lot of people is that JCPenney gained a massive
competitive advantage, and therefore this did force Google to act and react
quite heavily as well. This resulted in Google warning a lot of webmasters
about their link buying activities. Many of them would have received a 30
day penalty almost instantly. This was obviously provided through Google
Webmaster Tools where there's a new message that would appear informing you
of your penalty and the reason for it. Many times it
would be just paid links.
One of the major issues that came out of this though was the problem of
outing competitors, whether or not it's ethical and whether you should do
it at all. Obviously, for some, outing competitors is a good way of making
sure that your side gets up. It also gives you the opportunity to go in and
see if anyone else is buying links and try and get them further down the
rankings as a result.
This obviously creates an issue for websites. If you are buying links, you
have the double problem of Google potentially finding them or your
competitors. As JCPenney probably found out, this isn't a good tactic as
they lost a lot of rankings and they suffered their penalty, which a lot of
other companies would have done too.
Now in the short-term, JCPenney may have prospered. But long-term issues,
obviously, they've lost all their links and they've lost a lot of their
rankings they would have had. Again, this would apply to any other website.
So therefore, you can use paid links still in the short term, as we found
in 2011, but the likelihood is that you will now get a big penalty and you
could lose a lot of money as a result.
For more information, please visit Koozai or click on any of the links
below.