Google Admits ‘Organic Results’ Are Filler To Pump Deceptive Ads at Consumers
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Some of Google’s new search results look quite alarming in terms of every single link above the fold is either a paid ad, or links to yet another Google page wrapped in ads.
I have a huge monitor & it is impossible for me to click *anywhere* above the fold on some search results without going through Google’s toll booth or clicking off to yet another Google ad wrapped page.

(click on the image for the full sized view)
Some people have given Google the benefit of the doubt “well this is just vertical search” and “this is just for the consumer” but we see that in many cases it harms consumers by limiting choice:
Charlie Leocha, the director of the Consumer Travel Alliance, says Google Flight Search is “limiting consumers’ knowledge.” He explains, “this is a situation where Google is trusted as a ‘search engine’ that goes across the whole Web, but it is only going to a small select group of airlines and including them in Flight Search.”
The bottom line?
According to Leocha, “Google and the airlines have a sweetheart deal with each other, and the consumers are getting screwed.”
Those who coddled Google & gave Google the benefit of the doubt now have egg on their face, and the industry as a whole is poorer for their poor judgement & lack of stewardship.
As absurd as the above behavior is, it gets worse. When Google acquired DoubleClick, Larry Page wanted to keep Performics (an SEO/SEM company). But since it would have been a flagrant violation of law for him to run an SEO company, they now decide that nobody should run an SEO company…telling consumers to simply forget about SEO even when they specifically search out information about SEO!
Google recently ran AdWords ads with the following copy when consumers searched Google for SEO information:
“Forget about SEO. To be visible in Google today, try Adwords”
You know Google’s slogan: “maybe the best ads are just answers.” And sometimes they are misdirection or scams that quite literally kill people.
You can’t be 100% certain which is which until long AFTER you click. And by then Google’s cash register has already rang & it is off to dupe the next person.
Comments turned off, as this is a conversation that NEEDS TO SPREAD. If you run a blog about SEO, you owe it to your readers & your industry to cover this topic. If this topic doesn’t get broad coverage then pretty soon your career might be over & you will deserve it too.
Google Aggressively Enters Make Money Online Niche
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Even if you are in a seedy vertical that you think Google wouldn’t touch with a 10 foot pole, Google may still be gunning for you!
Recall that when Google bought DoubleClick, Larry Page wanted to keep running the Performics SEO & SEM shop:
Google would spin Performics out of DoubleClick, and sell it to holding firm Publicis. Only one major force inside of Google hated the plan. Guess who? Larry Page.
According to our source, Larry tried to sell the rest of Google’s executive team on keeping Performics. “He wanted to see how those things work. He wanted to experiment.”
A search engine selling SEO services? Yep.
And now they are aggressively entering the make money online niche. Both Prizes.org & YouTube are in the top 3 ad slots for “make money online”

And I am seeing some of those across portions of the content/display network as well. I just saw this in Gmail today.

How does this align with the Google AdWords TOS?
To protect the value and diversity of the ads running on Google, we don’t generally permit advertisers to manage multiple accounts featuring the same business or keywords except in certain limited exceptions. Furthermore, Google doesn’t permit multiple ads from the same or an affiliated company or person to appear on the same results page. We’ve found that pages with multiple text ads from the same company provide less relevant results and a lower quality experience for users. Over time, multiple ads from the same source also reduce overall advertiser performance and lower their return on investment.
Google doesn’t allow advertisers or affiliates to have any of the following:
- Ads across multiple accounts for the same or similar businesses
- Ads across multiple accounts triggered by the same or similar keywords
Well, as it turns out, the Google AdWords TOS doesn’t actually apply to Google.
Search is a zero sum game.
Google is just getting started with breakfast. I am afraid to see what the last meal looks like!
