Relationship Between SEO And The Search
Engines
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Search_engine_optimization)
Due to the high value and targeting of search results, there is
potential for an adversarial relationship betweensearch engines
and SEOs.
Some search engines have also reached out to the SEO industry, and
are frequent sponsors and guests at SEO conferences and seminars.
In fact, with the advent of paid inclusion, some search engines
now have a vested interest in the health of the optimization
community. All of the main search engines like Google's, Yahoo!'s,
MSN's and Ask.com's provide information/guidelines to help with
site optimization.
Google has a Sitemaps program to help webmasters learn if Google
is having any problems indexing their website and also provides
data on Google traffic to the website.
Yahoo! has Site Explorer that provides a way to submit your URLs
for free (like MSN/Google), determine how many pages are in the
Yahoo! index and drill down on inlinks to deep pages. Yahoo! has
an Ambassador Program and Google has a program for qualifying
Google Advertising Professionals.
Those who operate search engines recognize quickly that some web
masters (specifically search engine optimizers) are making bold
efforts to rank well in their search engines, even by manipulating
the page rankings in search results. For Infoseek and some other
search engines, optimizers were grabbing the source code of the
top-ranking pages and placing it in their pages.
Search engines have always frowned upon those aggressive SEO
practices; going to the extent of banning the pages in the search
listings. The more aggressive site owners' generating automated
sites for better ranking, suffered much search engine wrath; their
domains were banned from the search engines.
Today, many search engine optimization companies employ long-term,
low-risk strategies. Some SEO firms that do employ high-risk
strategies for their own affiliate, lead-generation, or content
sites, instead of taking the risk on client's web sites.