Panda was designed to target spam sites. Those are the sites that would often appear on the first page of results whenever you typed in your search terms. No doubt there have been many times when you clicked through to a site only to discover that it was page of adverts or worse a complete repetition of the search term entered. These sites were great examples of SEO at an earlier stage. Now that the stakes have risen, companies have to be much more relevant when optimizing their sites.
So how you beat the Panda on Google? Well firstly, you don’t. If you try to find a way to circumvent the algorithm it is highly likely that Google will automatically put your site on a black list and dump you right to the bottom of the search results. The best way to optimize your site is to look at what the Panda wants and see if you meet the requirements. If you do not, then you merely have to adapt accordingly. Panda has been mistaken for something that it is not. Many professionals believe the algorithm was just another way for Google to exert its all powerful control, but when studied Panda actually makes your site more relevant to its own content.
It was designed primarily to eliminate spam sites, and let’s face it no one’s going to miss those really. The secondary function of Panda has been to make content managers look at their sites and determine whether or not they are relevant to the search terms they want to be found for. For example; before Panda was introduced it was easier to have short reams of text with the search terms incorporated repeatedly at intervals. If you wanted to be known for terms like document management, all you needed to do was repeat it at intervals. With Panda you must still have these terms, but you cannot repeat them as much and the content must be longer and more relevant to the service you are selling.
It could be argued that Panda has merely made SEOs and companies do what they should have been doing in the first place; making themselves relevant to their target audience.