I started this blog, in part, to dethrone a Hall of Fame NFL kicker.
George Blanda played the longest of any player in NFL history and had the most points in the history of the league until Gary Anderson broke both records. This distant relation was fine for anecdotal reasons and good for a story when I met anyone over the age of 60, but bad for Google rankings.
Every time anyone ever typed “Blanda” into Google, I would be buried under a mountain of stats and game recaps. That is, until I launched this site. Nearly a year later, I am creeping ahead.
I’m sure you have your own George Blanda, a person that is crowding a term you would like to rank high for. My personal favorite is my friend Chris Wink, who has the misfortune of sharing his name with one of the founding members of The Blue Man Group. However, he was able to quickly usurp his azure menace. How? He started a blog.
While starting a blog is certainly the biggest step, here are some tips to further help you quash your own personal George Blanda. These may seem obvious if you already maintain a blog, but to any student contemplating what to do try these four steps:
- If possible, buy the domain name of the term you would like to rank high for. If you have a common name, this may not work, but you can get creative. Take advantage of subdomains and subfolders. For example I could buy isawesome.com and host the site in a subdomain that reads seanblanda.isawesome.com in the URL bar. The example is a little cheesy, but you get the idea. Search engines place a lot of weight on what is in the URL.
- The currency of search engines is links. Frequently update your content, and make it compelling. Easier said than done, but good content equals links. If you primarily write under the “brand” of your own name, then most links to your site will be embedded in text that contains your name. For example a fellow blogger may write: I enjoyed this post by Sean Blanda about X.
- Share the love. Don’t be like the mainstream media, give out links. When you link to someone you are essentially raising your hand and saying “hey, I’m over here”. They in turn, should have you on their radar.
- When you launch your blog be sure to put the URL on your resume, business cards, and email signature. You may even want to warm your contact book and let everyone know you have started a Web site.
I’m aware that articles about search engines are often a little skeevy, but nothing I advised above is radical or illegal. Have any other basic ideas for overcoming your own Google nemesis?



8 Comments to “How to overcome your George Blanda”
Posted: May 7th, 2008 at 10:49 pm
Very good advice. I would also recommend commenting on other blogs (Hey, wait a sec…) and leaving your URL or a permalink to a relevant post.
Also, do what you can to get other sites to pick up your URL or RSS feed. I get a good number of hits from Wired Journalists and other blogs/sites.
Posting links on Twitter also helps drives traffic.
Posted: May 8th, 2008 at 9:10 am
George Blanda was my first fave player, and was on tv fot the first football game I watched. He was near the end of his career but as QB and kicker he was the bomb to this 8 year old.
Posted: May 10th, 2008 at 6:42 am
Mark Farner, guitarist for Grand Funk Railroad.
Type “Farner” into Google and it takes until the fourth page to find something about yours truly. This guy might be pretty hard to take down, but I’m trying anyway.
Posted: May 11th, 2008 at 2:13 pm
George Blanda: UK grad. Representin’.
Good tips.
Posted: May 20th, 2008 at 2:03 am
OK, now try it as a Smith … I’ve cracked the top five with first (also common) and last name though!
Posted: May 21st, 2008 at 10:26 am
I am lucky enough to have a rather unique last name — I’ve never met anyone who I wasn’t related to with the same one. And none of my family members have much of a web presence
Posted: Jul 4th, 2008 at 2:29 pm
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Posted: Jul 4th, 2008 at 3:02 pm
[…] Blanda is out to own Blanda. I wish him well. It will be a tough task. (Note on those links: There’s two of […]
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