Black hat social media is emerging quickly and spawning a new era of
web spam. This affects the social media sites themselves, the users, and
the businesses utilizing the site for marketing.While many people are starting to recognize this trend, there is a
dearth of information on how black hat social media influences search
engine optimization (SEO).
You won’t find many definitions for “black hat social media,” so allow me to define it here. Black hat social media is an attempt to utilize a social media site for some kind of gain, using methods that are outside the social media website’s guidelines.
What Is Black Hat Social Media?
First off, “black hat” is a phrase originally coined to refer to a type of hacker — one who “violates computer security for little reason beyond maliciousness or for personal gain.” In the search marketing world, “black hat SEO” refers to techniques and tactics that increase search engine rankings in ways that fall outside of the search engines’ guidelines or terms of service. (Conversely, “white hat SEO” refers to SEO techniques and tactics that are ethical — i.e., fall within the search engines’ guidelines.)You won’t find many definitions for “black hat social media,” so allow me to define it here. Black hat social media is an attempt to utilize a social media site for some kind of gain, using methods that are outside the social media website’s guidelines.
Examples Of Black Hat Social Media
So what are some examples of black hat social media, you ask? Well, allow me to list a few.- Buying fake Likes, YouTube Subscribers, +1s, etc. from click farms
- Sharing hyperlinks that pose a security risk
- Using a program to automatically follow and unfollow new accounts
- Creating fake social media profiles to like, share, comment or gather information
- Writing fake negative reviews on competitors’ pages or positive reviews on your own
- Securing social profiles with competitors’ names, ranking them in Google, and posting negative comments
Ways It Can Influence Google Search
Now we get to the heart of the matter. Can black hat social media impact SEO? Let’s take a look at several hypothetical examples, and then we can leave it up to the community to decide.
• Buying Fake Followers, Likes And Shares. According to Search Engine Land,
“Social signals are emerging as ranking factors as search engines
determine how to leverage our social interaction and behavior.” Most SEO
professionals will agree that social signals have some impact on SEO, even if they’re not a direct ranking factor.
For example, if one were to buy
likes, tweets, +1s and shares to fake an interaction with content, this
could falsely inflate the content’s level of authority, especially if
the profile listing this social interaction is public and crawlable by
Google.
• Optimizing Fake Accounts. When
people create fake accounts, they have the ability to operate under an
alias. For example, if I create a fake account with a competitor’s name
and optimize it, this fake account may rank for the competitor’s name.
Users will then see that profile in Google search.
If the fake account outranks any of the
competitor’s real web properties, that can hurt them by impinging on
their click share. Or, if what is displayed in the search listings
deters the user, that could hurt the overall brand image/reputation.
• Fake Reviews. Unfortunately,
I have seen this black hat social media strategy pretty often, mostly
due to my years working in online reputation management. Someone will
leave a fake negative review about a business on a social media site,
and it will stick! This can really hurt the business if the negative
review ranks well, and a potential customer finds the review upon
performing a web search.
Furthermore, reviews that contain the
appropriate structured data markup can display as a rich snippet in
search results — and users seeing a low star count for a business may
decide to take their business elsewhere. There has also been a great
deal of discussion about whether negative reviews impact SEO (and if so, how), but there is no clear answer on this.
• Poor Quality Social Sites. We
all know that in the SEO world today, if you get a link from the wrong
website it can become a major issue. This begs the question: “Could a
share from the wrong social media website hurt your SEO?”
As we see in link evaluation tools like
Majestic SEO, links are generally gauged based on the domain/page
authority, topical relevance, etc. So if you have thousands of shares
from spammy, off-topic social media profiles, could that hurt your
rankings?
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