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This is a question for those of us who can easily recognize when a company is participating in a sketchy SEO scheme to bulk up their search engine rank.

Recently, I've been searching for a moving company. After hearing several estimates, I decided on one company that gave me a reasonable rate (not the cheapest) and was very professional over the phone, providing a great explanation of all costs and previous customer referrals.

I then went online to see what additional information I could find on the company. I found all kinds of content aggregation sites linking to the company and obviously fake reviews of the site (same copy used for different sites, reviews).

Now my question is, based on my "meat space" experience alone, I would have gone with this company. Now, because I happen to be a web application developer, I've spotted a shameless SEO scheme. Should this affect whether I give this company my business?

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What programming question is in there? – EBGreen Feb 11 at 16:42
none, but fwiw astroturfing = instant boycott for me – annakata Feb 11 at 16:45
I'm not big on closing questions, but this is as far away from programming related as it gets. Sorry. – Paolo Bergantino Feb 11 at 16:46
In my defense, this is a question for programmers, as programmers typically are the only ones who can recognize this issue. Perhaps I should have rephrased it "Would you use sketchy SEO tactics?", but I think we all know the answer to that. – jakemcgraw Feb 11 at 16:55
What SEO tactics to use are a business decision. Implementing the decision may be a programmer task, but by and large the decisions on what tactics to use should be handled by business decision makers. – EBGreen Feb 11 at 17:10

closed as not programming related by Hank Gay, EBGreen, Paolo Bergantino, annakata Feb 11 at 16:44

3 Answers

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The fact that you're event asking this question tells me that it already has affected your decision :)

I can't say if it would affect mine. I tend to do business with people who are professional and courteous. So the phone call would have swayed me the most.

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Personally, I would choose to avoid them. Questionable SEO tweaks are one thing, but faked reviews are another. The former could be explained away as a form of aggressive advertising, but the latter borders on fraud, in my opinion.

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It is a factor to consider when making a business decision and encourages deeper investigation about their company.

Your opinion is what your opinion is. There is no correct judgement as to what it "should" be. It is your own. Obviously a mixed opinion from you.

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