Way back when we created this man's first web site, he was
relatively sane, if occasionally ecstatic. His small cottage
industry began flourishing on the Internet immediately and
tripled its annual revenues within a few short years.
We still have this client and his 400+ page site maintenance
job, but he's since developed quirks, and even twitches
of—perhaps it's better to just call them memories. You
see, he was once at the top of Google.
He'd done every thing right, diligently, and by that I mean
his success was not a fluke. He paid Google and he paid me
and he stuffed those pages with products of fine
craftsmanship. Then, zap! one morning just before Christmas,
it was gone.
His site disappeared from the map of the universe; somewhere
beyond page 5 of the endless search results. Being 100%
Internet and therefore Google-dependent, business came to a
crashing stillness and quiet. The phone not ringing quickly
drove him nuts.
Humans at Google couldn't answer his questions, Why? And I
couldn't even spell algorithm without looking it up.
Before the grim revamp of Google, there was, now that I
think of it, one sign of his fantasy life. By far and away
the world's favorite page on his site had become
"How To Build A Treehouse."
You wouldn't believe the email he receives about treehouses.
Every country in the world, it seems, has an Inbound Link to
his free treehouse plans. It's one of those great universal
human yearnings, evidently, that transcend language and
culture.
Good news, you'd think, to his web marketing firm. But.
Let's survey the robots on the idea: Which is more likely to
make money for the Google executives and stock-optioned
staff — free treehouse plans no one buys ads for, or
the highest-priced products in demand?
That's a no-brainer.
He took it hard, this fact that small businesses don't
matter much in the pre-IPO scheme. Big web development
houses could throw a team at the problem, but we had to stop
everything and divine the secret rules. He went off in
search of alternative intelligence.
There on the backroads in cafes and cardrooms, where real
people take each other seriously and share every kernel of
knowledge they have on a subject, he found answers. That's
the buick of the Internet we love, eh guys?
Our client (who remains unnamed because of a dirty little
rumor that actual humans at Google do ban sites from the
search results for such treasons as outsmarting them)
restored his Page Rank in the new Google so successfully he
no longer needs his ad-word campaign.
So, take heed, all ye of the upright position: If popularity
matters to you, it's time to climb down out of the trees and
show these robo-s how to play the game.
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