Google hit back hard yesterday after it learned lyrics site
Rap Genius
had been using dubious SEO tricks to attain top spots in
search results. Now RapGenius.com doesn’t appear on the first page of
results for a search of “Rap Genius,” and popular queries like “Jay-Z
Holy Grail Lyrics” don’t bring up the startup like they used to.
[Update: But the two companies are working on a resolution.]
Founded in 2009, Rap Genius is a lyrics and text annotation site. It
lets users provide their own explanations for song lyrics, religious
texts, legal documents, images, and more that other users see when they
hover over snippets of text hosted on the site. The startup lept into
the limelight when it received a massive $15 million investment led by Andreessen Horowitz in late 2012.
Known for their foul mouths and outrageous behavior, the Rap Genius
founders had been riding high over the last year as their site climbed
to prominent and lucrative slots in Google search results. For a sense
of how ridiculous these guys are, check out our onstage talk at
TechCrunch Disrupt NY where founder Mahbod Moghadam apologizes for
telling Mark Zuckerberg to “suck his d*ck”.
Rap Genius Announces News Genius at Disrupt NY
But earlier this week, Rap Genius invited bloggers to join its “Rap Genius Blog Affiliate” program.
John Marbach,
the founder of email filtering startup Glider, emailed in asking for
details, and Rap Genius offerered to tweet links to his blog in exchange
for him placing a series of links to Rap Genius’ Justin Bieber lyrics
on his blog. The links were designed to trick Google into giving Rap
Genius better result rankings on searches for lyrics to songs from
Bieber’s new album — sure to be popular searches this season.
Marbach then revealed Rap Genius’ unscrupulous tactics by publishing the email it sent him in a widely read
blog post, prompting Google’s webspam czar Matt Cutts
to announce on Hacker News, ”We’re investigating this now.”
Rap Genius apologized
in an open letter to Google, asking for the entire lyrics site category
to be examined, implying shady SEO tactics were common amongst its
competitors.
That apology doesn’t seem to have gotten it very far, as Google this
morning practically swept Rap Genius out of its search results.
Previously, Rap Genius was appearing at the top or close to the top of
search results for queries of popular rap songs and the word “lyrics,”
for example “
Kanye West Flashing Lights Lyrics.” It would even sometimes appear high in simple searches for artist and song names.
Now, you won’t find Rap Genius for that query until the fifth page of
results, likely further than anyone would look. For evidence of how
serious the punshment is, adding “
Rap Genius” to the end of that query actually makes Rap Genius appear even deeper down the results on the sixth page.
And just to make sure it was clear, Google banished RapGenius.com to the bottom of the
sixth page of results of searches for “Rap Genius.”
Becoming practically unsearchable could be a huge hit to Rap Genius’
business, which depends on Google search referral traffic. Without that
traffic, it will be much harder to grow its user base, collect new
annotations, and potentially monetize with ads down the road.
Whether Google’s reaction was too tough is a matter of opinion.
Gaming search results with spammy SEO tactics is certainly deplorable,
but wiping Rap Genius off of top result pages for queries that include
its own name is pretty harsh. Whether the startup deserves it or should
get a lighter punishment depends on your perspective regarding the
sanctity of Google search results. We’re awaiting a response from the
Rap Genius founders, and have been promised a statement shortly.
Update: Rap Genius’ founders have provided this
statement, indicating they’re working with Google on being returned to
better search result rankings:
“We
are working with Google right now to resolve this. They’ve been really
great, helping us identify changes we need to make, even on Christmas.
We’re working on it as fast as we can, and expect to be back on Google
very soon.
It sucks to be off Google for us and for the thousands of our
community members who have worked so hard to create what’s often the
best search result.
We hope everyone who reads this will take a little time out from
their Christmas and head to Rap Genius and sign up so you can contribute
your knowledge on your favorite subjects – becoming a member of our
community makes the site way more fun. Merry Christmas”
Looks like Rap Genius and Google might come to some compromise where
Google restores at least some of the startup’s search result ranking
juice in exchange for it cleaning up its act. However, at least some of
the decreased visibility is likely to stick around for a long time,
impeding Rap Genius’ business. We’ll have more details on the outcome of
the talks as soon as possible and we are awaiting a response from
Google.