The Great Google SketchUp Experiment – Moz

Skip to content

Moz logo

Menu open

Menu close

Search

Products

Moz Pro

Moz Pro Home

Moz Local

Moz Local Home

STAT

Mozscape API

Free SEO Tools

Competitive Research

Link Explorer

Keyword Explorer

Domain Analysis

MozBar

More Free SEO Tools

Learn SEO

Beginner’s Guide to SEO

SEO Learning Center

Moz Academy

SEO Q&A

Webinars, Whitepapers, & Guides

Blog

Why Moz

Agency Solutions

Enterprise Solutions

Small Business Solutions

Case Studies

The Moz Story

New Releases

Log in

Log out

Products

Moz Pro

Your All-In-One Suite of SEO Tools

The essential SEO toolset: keyword research, link building, site audits, page optimization, rank tracking, reporting, and more.

Learn more

Try Moz Pro free

Moz Local

Complete Local SEO Management

Raise your local SEO visibility with easy directory distribution, review management, listing updates, and more.

Learn more

Check my presence

STAT

Enterprise Rank Tracking

SERP tracking and analytics for SEO experts, STAT helps you stay competitive and agile with fresh insights.

Learn more

Book a demo

Mozscape API

The Power of Moz Data via API

Power your SEO with the proven, most accurate link metrics in the industry, powered by our index of trillions of links.

Learn more

Get connected

Compare SEO Products

Free SEO Tools

Competitive Research

Competitive Intelligence to Fuel Your SEO Strategy

Gain intel on your top SERP competitors, keyword gaps, and content opportunities.

Find competitors

Link Explorer

Powerful Backlink Data for SEO

Explore our index of over 40 trillion links to find backlinks, anchor text, Domain Authority, spam score, and more.

Get link data

Keyword Explorer

The One Keyword Research Tool for SEO Success

Discover the best traffic-driving keywords for your site from our index of over 500 million real keywords.

Search keywords

Domain Analysis

Free Domain SEO Analysis Tool

Get top competitive SEO metrics like Domain Authority, top pages, ranking keywords, and more.

Analyze domain

MozBar

Free, Instant SEO Metrics As You Surf

Using Google Chrome, see top SEO metrics instantly for any website or search result as you browse the web.

Try MozBar

More Free SEO Tools

Learn SEO

Beginner’s Guide to SEO
The #1 most popular introduction to SEO, trusted by millions.
Read the Beginner’s Guide

How-To Guides
Step-by-step guides to search success from the authority on SEO.
See All SEO Guides

SEO Learning Center
Broaden your knowledge with SEO resources for all skill levels.
Visit the Learning Center

Moz Academy
Upskill and get certified with on-demand courses & certifications.
Explore the Catalog

On-Demand Webinars
Learn modern SEO best practices from industry experts.
View All Webinars

SEO Q&A
Insights & discussions from an SEO community of 500,000+.
Find SEO Answers

August 7-9, 2023
Lock in Super Early Bird savings for MozCon

Snag tickets

Blog

Why Moz

Small Business Solutions
Uncover insights to make smarter marketing decisions in less time.
Grow Your Business

The Moz Story
Moz was the first & remains the most trusted SEO company.
Read Our Story

Agency Solutions
Earn & keep valuable clients with unparalleled data & insights.
Drive Client Success

Case Studies
Explore how Moz drives ROI with a proven track record of success.
See What’s Possible

Enterprise Solutions
Gain a competitive edge in the ever-changing world of search.
Scale Your SEO

New Releases
Get the scoop on the latest and greatest from Moz.
See What’s New

New Feature: Moz Pro
Surface actionable competitive intel

Learn More

Log in

Moz Pro

Moz Local

Moz Local Dashboard

Mozscape API

Mozscape API Dashboard

Moz Academy

Avatar

Moz Home

Notifications

Account & Billing

Manage Users

Community Profile

My Q&A

My Videos

Log Out

R

By: Rebecca Haden
October 7, 2008

The Great Google SketchUp Experiment

Link Building

This YouMoz entry was submitted by one of our community members. The author’s views are entirely his or her own (excluding an unlikely case of hypnosis) and may not reflect the views of Moz.

SEO is an analytical occupation, so it’s no surprise that we experiment. The trouble is, we can’t experiment freely with our clients’ websites, and setting up a website just for experimentation doesn’t really mimic the natural conditions in the online environment. Therefore, I was delighted when I recently had the opportunity to arrange a small experiment under remarkably controlled conditions.
I have to provide a little bit of background. Before I became a fulltime SEO, I did a lot of teacher training. When I began working with a web engineer with a commitment to client education, it was only a small step to persuade him to do a little teacher tech training with me. He was excited about Google SketchUp, an application designed for architects. I came up with a dozen lesson plans, we did the training, I posted the plans at my education blog, and that was the end of it.  
Until the engineer, having seen the lesson plans mount up, decided to make a page at his website with links to all those plans. So there was a new page with no content, really, besides a group of links to lesson plans on SketchUp. It had nothing to do with the rest of his website, which is about web design. Yet it’s a real page, not something created for experimental purposes. I’m a real teacher, and my blog is a real education blog. The new page of links is in fact the most useful page on the web for people who want cross-curricular lesson plans for SketchUp.
And here’s the great thing: almost nobody does. I checked, and sure enough, there’s hardly any searches for SketchUp lesson plans, and no competition to speak of. So here we had an obscure little page that provides the best information on an obscure little subject which is not associated with its domain in any way. There is no money changing hands, no clients to worry about, just a keyword phrase and a page. It’s not a keyword phrase carefully chosen for its SEO potential, nor was the page itself designed to pull people in. There’s also no history or industry buzz. The domain has a healthy page rank, but no ads or paid links, and no IRL marketing going on for it in the education community, either. If that page got any traffic, it would be entirely a reflection of SEO efforts. And, since no one else was making any competing efforts, it would be a reflection of the particular SEO efforts I wanted to track.  
The question, then, was how quickly would a little manipulation show results?
And I say “a little manipulation” advisedly. I posted a couple of comments at an old discussion on a Google educators’ group, one at my education blog, and one each at a couple of educational technology discussions where I sometimes hang out. I posted a link at Wikipedia. That’s it. 

These were not enticing links, either. They were bald announcements: “There’s a collection of lesson plans for SketchUp posted at ___.” The anchor text wasn’t optimized. I didn’t email anyone about them or otherwise use networking, charm, or eloquence. Just links.
The results? They were evident within days. The links collection is on the third page at Google, the second page at Yahoo, the first page at MSN. One of the lesson plans (the one with the engineer’s very cool log cabin model) was on the front page at both Google and Yahoo before I did any experimenting, and it hasn’t moved, but it’s not in the top hundred at MSN. The rest of the lesson plans are languishing in obscurity, unfindable unless you actually type in something like “SketchUp lesson plan on the Golden Section” – and even then, the page of links is #1 and the lesson plan itself is down in the middle of the page. #1 at Google is the comment I made at the Google groups page – with the engineer’s URL prominently displayed before you even click through. Not bad for half an hour of SEO.
Traffic has also zoomed. At one point, the page of links had more visitors than the engineer’s homepage. While some people do come look at the actual SketchUp lesson plans from search, most come through the page of links. There may not be very many people looking for SketchUp lesson plans, but those who do are definitely coming to visit. If there were anything for sale to teachers there, the engineer would be celebrating.
What does this tell us?

First, I think it shows that standard SEO works. In the absence of manipulation, I think it’s safe to assume that the lesson plans themselves – at a relatively old blog about education – would be the hands-down winners over a newly-made page at a non-educational site with mere links to the lesson plans. Dropping a few links made a difference. When we so often have to wonder whether our results come from our efforts, from the IRL marketing we coach our clients to do, or simply from some natural progress over which we have no control, it’s good to see some evidence.
Second, it shows that the search engines work. Once the page was pointed out to them, they served that page right up to the searchers. We do have to point things out, and the system can be manipulated, but in the absence of active pushing around, it works. This ought to be encouraging to those of us who emphasize excellent content and honesty over trickery. It’s so easy to feel as though you’re quixotically encouraging your clients to follow rules while all around them others are breaking the rules and perhaps at least briefly benefiting.
Third, this should cheer up our clients who haven’t yet hit Google’s page one for their desired keywords. Most of the traffic to the page in question is from referring sites, not from search. Good quality links benefit the website before they move the page up in search rankings.

It is possible that you’re questioning my use of the word “benefit” there. After all, the visitors are leaving the page to follow the links. A few checked out the engineer’s portfolio while they were there; one went to the contact page. But it may seem to you that the engineer is not benefiting at all, while I had the geeky fun of my experiment and a blog post topic.
There are other sorts of benefits, though. The engineer tells me that late at night, when he is at work in his office, he enjoys seeing people from all over the world visiting that page. Someday one of them might need a website.

For more link building tips, check out The Beginner’s Guide to Link Building:

Read the Guide!

Read Next

Link Relevance vs. Content Relevance in Link Building

Read this post

In Defense of Spam Score and the Concept of a Toxic Link

Read this post

Measuring Link Building

Read this post

Comments

Please keep your comments TAGFEE by following the community etiquette

Comments are closed. Got a burning question? Head to our Q&A section to start a new conversation.

Moz logo

Contact

Community

Free Trial

Terms & Privacy

Jobs

Help

News & Press

Copyright 2022 © Moz, Inc. All rights reserved.

类似文章