“Top Ranking in Google Local Can Be Rented - Search Engine Journal” plus 1 more
“Top Ranking in Google Local Can Be Rented - Search Engine Journal” plus 1 more |
Top Ranking in Google Local Can Be Rented - Search Engine Journal Posted: 15 Aug 2019 02:51 AM PDT A post on Diggity Marketing's blog describes a tactic that appears to expose lax ranking standards on Google Local searches. The tactic is to rank a website for local search terms then rent the website to a local business. The local business can rent positions in Google and collect business leads. This is What Rank and Rent IsWhat Matt Diggity describes is creating a website that ranks for a search phrase, typically but not limited to a local search phrase. A typical search keyword can be Name of City + Service. Rank and Rent works like this: This is how Matt Diggity describes it:
Rank and Rent is Lead GenerationRank and Rent is a variation on the lead generation business model. Lead generation is the practice of ranking a web page for a search phrase then selling leads from that page. Companies like Yelp and HomeAdvisor are examples of lead generation businesses. Yelp and HomeAdvisor rank web pages for local search related keywords. Their business model depends on ranking for search phrases then selling leads from the Google Local Search traffic (sometimes via paid advertising). Rank and Rent is a variation on lead generation. Rank and Rent rents the entire website and all the keywords that it ranks for to a single business. This is good for the business because the business can benefit from the Rank and Rent website as well as from rankings from its own website. Local Search Keyword RankingYelp and HomeAdvisor use their own sites to rank for search queries to sell ads and leads. New Food Economy published an expose revealing that GrubHub purchases domain names that match business names in order to sell leads from those unofficial websites. As you can see in the screenshot below, Google is ranking GrubHub for the name of the Mosher's Deli restaurant and then the moshersgourmetlongbeach.com website also owned by GrubHub is ranking beneath it. New Food Economy reported that ranking the name of a business is a way to attract users to the GrubHub owned site and when they click the button to place an order, GrubHub earns a referral fee. ![]() The actual Moshers Deli website ranks in position seven. But that's besides the point. The point is that even a big brand like GrubHub ranks domains other than it's own domain to rank in Google in order to generate leads. Although GrubHub is not practicing rank and rent, it is ranking websites other than it's own site in order to generate leads. What Matt Diggity describes is a variation of this tactic of ranking a website for the purpose of generating leads. The difference in the rank and rent business model is that the search marketer doesn't sell leads, it rents the website itself, it does not sell leads. Local Search Ranking Easily Exploited?Early in 2019 a site created almost entirely with Lorem Ipsum Latin language content ranked number one in Google Local search. Almost all the content was written in an extinct language and it still managed to rank at the top of Google local search. Read: SEO Contest Exposes Weakness in Google's Algorithm That Latin language site ranked for months. Google didn't remove the Latin language site until I published an article about it. The fact that a site written almost entirely in Latin can rank in Google local search exposes a weakness in Google's local search algorithms. Rank and Rent is Not NewRank and Rent is not new. I know that domainers have been renting their domains for at least fifteen years that I know of. The practice of ranking and renting domains for lucrative keywords has been around longer than that, as I know many people who rented or sold domains that ranked. Read Rank and Rent on Diggity Marketing Read New Food Economy article on GrubHub Domain Ranking |
Over 50% of searches on Google result in zero clicks - TheDomains.com Posted: 15 Aug 2019 10:14 AM PDT A report by Rand Fishkin was published yesterday that now 50% of Google searches end without a click, or what's known as Zero click searches. A zero–click search results in the answer being displayed directly at the top of a Google search result. The person initiating the search gets their answer and does not need to click any links to move further to another website. SearchEngineLand.com wrote:
In my opinion this is another boost for one word premium .coms that don't need someone to search for them due to them having a powerful memorable brand. As the SEL article concluded, The proportion of zero-click searches has increased over the years, and the more searches that end without users clicking through to a page, the less traffic and fewer marketing opportunities brands and publishers are likely to have to develop their own audiences. |
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