Black hat SEO refers to practices that increase a page’s rank in search engines through means that violate the search engines’ terms of service. While black hat SEO techniques may bring better rankings for your page in the short-run, you run a huge risk of damaging your page’s reputation in the long run. Eventually, Google will identify pages that are using practices that violate their terms of service and penalize them.
In essence, Black Hat SEO seeks to con Google’s (and other search engines’) algorithms. This goes fundamentally against the purpose of search engines such as Google that aim to provide solutions for users by directing them to the most relevant and useful pages for a particular query. By using black hat tactics, an irrelevant or undeserving page might show up in response to a legitimate user query.
A list of tactics and strategies employed by black hat SEO practitioners have been openly denounced on Google’s Webmaster Guidelines and Bing’s Webmaster Guidelines.
A simple way to find out whether the tactics you are employing are black hat or not is to ask yourself this question: “Is the page that I am creating adding value to the user or is it just for search engines?”
If no value is being added for the user but you expect search engine rankings to improve, then it’s highly likely that your tactics include black hat SEO. This same test can be applied to paid search strategies and tactics, to find out if it’s black hat PPC or not.
Some of the known black hat SEO strategies are:
Some websites and webmasters have used black hat SEO to reap short-term benefits, but they are as the name suggests: “short term”. The search engine improvements that you experience over the course of a few months will all amount to nothing if your website gets blacklisted by Google and/or other search engines.
Admittedly, white-hat SEO techniques take more time to show results, but those results are for the long-term and will continue to provide benefits for years to come.