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Ask the Experts: Will W3C Validation Affect My Search Engine Rankings? ask the experts

Ask the Experts: Will W3C Validation Affect My Search…

  • May 8, 2007
  • by Jennifer Grappone

Q: A week ago I received a message from my SEO consultant regarding HTML W3C validation. He said that I need to pay $5,000 to upgrade my site for the validation. How important or crucial is this validation for the SEO? All webpages run correctly in the browsers (IE, Firefox) but I didn’t know about this HTML validation. Will validation impact our ranking results?

A: The short answer is “No.” While we advocate W3C validation as a general web development best practice, we are not aware of any direct connection between validation and search engine rankings. The majority of websites, including many websites with top rankings on search engines, as well as the search engine websites themselves, do not validate with the W3C validation. However, there may be specific invalid code that your SEO consultant is concerned about. It is possible that the W3C validation check found errors in your code (such as a missing end quote or a duplicated tag) that could potentially be a problem for search engines.

We consider W3C HTML validation a helpful tool for observing a website, but not an end-all goal (our own website, for example, is not fully validated). if your SEO consultant is telling you that it will cost $5,000 to gain validation for your site, you should find out exactly what errors he or she is observing, and why those are specifically going to cause ranking or indexing problems. If this information isn’t forthcoming, then we think you’re being hoodwinked. Get a second opinion before you pay for the fix!

Ask the Experts: Am I Giving Away SEO Secrets? ask the experts

Ask the Experts: Am I Giving Away SEO Secrets?

  • April 30, 2007
  • by Jennifer Grappone

Q: In order to serve more customers, my web development firm will be offering SEO, based upon the methods in your book. My question is, will passing my recommendations to other webmasters give away all of my SEO techniques? Wouldn’t this be “shooting myself in the foot” so to speak and give a rival webmaster the means to quickly offer their own SEO program using what I’ve handed over? How can I perform SEO and still protect my methods?

A: We don’t think you’re in danger of “shooting yourself in the foot,” for a number of reasons.

First, every website is different, and therefore your advice for every website will be different. Your value as an SEO depends on you giving out specific, well-researched advice based on target audience, conversion goals, and so on – not just a list of best practices. If you are delivering solid SEO recommendations for one website, most of these recommendations will not be transferable to another website.

Second, as we like to say, SEO is not brain surgery. It’s more a mixture of common sense, great writing skills, and boring little details. So, whether you hand them your recommendations or not, your rival webmasters can figure out how to implement basic SEO best practices by surfing the web, reviewing other sites, and reading our SEO book. The question is — will they bother?

And third, good SEO takes a lot of work! There’s much more to being a successful SEO than just reading your recommendations, or our book, or even memorizing basic best practices. For example, good keyword research takes hours. To be good at SEO, you also need to spend time keeping up with search news and developments to make sure you’re giving current recommendations. And it takes work and skill to communicate with your customers so that they understand and trust you.

So, as long as you’re doing good work and building up your experience, knowledge, and range of customers, you probably won’t be giving away anything by handing over good SEO recommendations – it’s more likely that you’ll just be building your reputation and creating another satisfied client.

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Gravity Search marketing is led by SEO industry veteran and author Jennifer Grappone in Los Angeles. The company was founded in 2006 following the success of the book Search Engine Optimization: An Hour a Day (Wiley, 2006, 2008, 2011), which Jennifer co-authored. Gravity’s clients include Fortune 500 companies, global entertainment brands, niche B2Bs, large and small retailers, and nonprofits.
Our small, talented California-based team specializes in SEO, advertising, analytics, and online brand visibility. Senior Technology Manager Andrew Berg, who joined Gravity in 2009, elevates the company’s technical SEO expertise to an elite level.
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