Should I Even Bother Trying To Recover This Site After Google Penguin?
-
Hello all,
I would like to get your opinion on whether I should invest time and money to improve a website which was hit by Google Penguin in April 2014.
(I know, April 2014 was nearly 2 years ago. However, this site has not been a top priority for us and we have just left until now).
The site is www.salmonrecipes.net
Basically, we aggregated over 700 salmon recipes from major supermarkets, famous chefs, and others (all with their permission) and made them available on this site. It was a good site at the time but it is showing its age now.
For a few years we were occasionally #1 on Google in the US for "salmon recipes", but normally we would be between #2 and #4.
We made money from the site almost entirely through Adsense. We never made a huge amount, but it paid our office rent every month, which was handy.
We also built up an email database of several thousand followers, but we've not really used this much. (Yet).
In the year from 25th April 2011 to 24th April 2012 the site attracted just over 500k visits.
After the rankings dropped due to Google Penguin, traffic dropped by 77% in the year from 25th April 2011 to 24th April 2012. Rankings and traffic have not recovered at all, and are only getting worse.
I am happy to accept that we deserved our rankings to fall during the Google Penguin re-shuffle. I stupidly commissioned an offshore company to build lots of links which, in hindsight, were basically just spam, and totally without any real value. However they assured me it was safe and I trusted them, despite my own nagging reservations.
Anyway, I have full details of all the links they created, and therefore I could remove many of these 'relatively' easily. (Of course, removing hundreds of links would take a lot of time).
My questions ...
1. How can I evaluate the probability of this site 'recovering' from Google Penguin. I am willing to invest time/money on link removal and new (ethical) SEO work if there is a reasonable chance of regaining a position in the top 5 on Google (US) for "salmon recipes" and various long-tail terms. But I am keen to avoid spending time/money on this if it is unlikely we will recover. How can I figure out my chances?
2. Generally, I accept that this model of site is in decline. Relying on Google to drive traffic to a site, and on Google to produce revenue via its Adsense scheme, is risky and not entirely sensible. Also, Google seems to provide more and more 'answers' itself, rather than sending people to e.g. a website listing recipes. Given this, is it worth investing any money in this at all?
3. Can you recommend anyone who specialises in this kind of recovery work. (As I said, I have a comprehensive list of all the links that were built, etc).
OK, that is all for now.
I am really looking forward to whatever opinions you may have about this. I'll provide more info if required.
Huge thanks
David -
If you have the ability to remove the bad links, then this is always the better option. It's a bit of a pain and can take some time but removing is always better than disavowing.
Feel free to send me an email at marie@hiswebmarketing.com and I'll put you in touch with someone who can give you a good idea as to whether or not your site is a good candidate for recovery.
-
Thanks Marie,
I really appreciate you taking the time to provide your thoughts here.
I am sure you are right, and that almost all the links we created over the years are probably now considered unnatural, regardless of whether they were built in a relatively low intensity way several years ago or more high intensity by our Sri Lanakan supplier. Regardless, I fear that once they are all removed / disavowed, then we still won't rank very highly as we won't have enough natural links to provide the rankings we hope for. Of course, if take a long term view of the project then it is definitely better to 'wipe clean' our past mistakes now and start again from a low base, rather than to just leave all the unnatural links in place forever. But it is still a sobering thought to have to spend time/money on cleaning this up now with no real understanding of what to expect once the work is done.
One quick question ... can I simply disavow bad links right away, or would it be better for me to try to remove them manually first?
Finally, I would really appreciate you putting me in touch with your friend who may be able to look into this in a little more detail for me.
Huge thanks again
David -
Hi David,
"At that time we did occasionally do some off-site SEO work such as paying for a batch of articles to be created and submitted, or getting a custom written press release distributed."
Many of these links are likely ones that Google may now consider unnatural. Whether or not your site can recover from Penguin really depends, IMO, on the number of truly naturally earned links that you have. I've worked with companies with manual penalties (a little bit different than Penguin, but still quite similar) where we tried to remove the penalty by just dealing with the most obvious spam links made by a low quality SEO link building company. Google failed us and gave us example links that were from years ago prior to hiring an SEO. They were links that the site owner had made on his own via publishing articles and submitting to directories. My point is that you may find that some of your previous rankings were propped up on the power of links that are now considered unnatural.
Unfortunately though, to know whether you're likely to be able to recover is a tough call. I am not currently taking on clients for consulting jobs like this, but I'm happy to put you in touch with someone who can take a really good look at your site and give you an idea as to whether or not recovery is likely and how hard it would be to do the work.
"I am fairly sure that a high percentage of our inward links are either having no positive effect or, worse, are having a negative effect. What is the simplest/easiest/cheapest way for me to safely and comprehensively get rid of all these dodgy links so that I can start new SEO activity afresh?"
Tough question to answer. If you want to try doing this on your own...and I think it's certainly possible to do it on your own, then get as complete a list of backlinks as you can. This may mean buying a membership for a month on ahrefs.com and majesticseo.com. You can also download your links from Open site explorer, and of course, look at your Webmaster Tools links as well. Put these links all together in a spreadsheet and manually look at one link from each domain linking to you. For every single link, assess whether it was likely one that was made for SEO purposes. If so, then add it to your disavow file and disavow on the domain level. If you're not sure, then it's best to err on the side of caution and disavow. Then, once your done, file your disavow file. The next time Penguin refreshes (or possibly after two refreshes), if you have done a thorough enough job you should see some improvement. If you don't, it means that either you have not disavowed all of your self made links, or that Panda is affecting your site which is a whole other issue.
One other thought - if you were given reports from your link building companies on what links were made, then start off by disavowing all of those.
Good luck!
-
Hi Marie and Andy,
Thanks for your contributions.
Marie, your first post touches upon many very important issues.
We did rank well for e.g. "salmon recipes" on Google US and particularly on Google UK for a couple of years or more, before Penguin. At that time we did occasionally do some off-site SEO work such as paying for a batch of articles to be created and submitted, or getting a custom written press release distributed. This work seemed to make a positive difference at the time, but I can't be totally sure how worthwhile it was in terms of securing our good ranking at that time.
Then, we scaled up the off-site SEO quite a lot, hiring a company from Sri Lanka to do lots of work every month.
I am guessing that the links generated by this later and more intensive period of work are more spammy than those produced in the earlier, low-key efforts. I appreciate that the earlier work wouldn't have generated much in the way of 'quality' links, but my gut feeling is that this earlier work is probably less likely to be seen as definitely spammy.
Anyway, I guess I just don't know where we would have deserved to rank without any of this paid-for SEO work at all, and I have no idea where we'd deserve to be now if the spammy links get removed or disavowed.
I suppose there is not going to be any kind of clear answer to any of this without first doing the work to remove/disavow the links.
Maybe I should be looking at this a different way.
I am fairly sure that a high percentage of our inward links are either having no positive effect or, worse, are having a negative effect. What is the simplest/easiest/cheapest way for me to safely and comprehensively get rid of all these dodgy links so that I can start new SEO activity afresh?
Cheers
David -
Hi Marie,
I am exactly the same as you in those circumstances and certainly no offence was taken to anything that you said. I didn't even think about that
-Andy
-
Hi Andy,
I just wasn't completely clear whether the previous high rankings were obtained before or after hiring a link builder. It sounds like they were there before the bad links were made and if so, that is great news and the site does have some chance at recovery. With that being said, I'd be a little concerned about a possible Panda issue if the site consists primarily of information that is aggregated from other sources.
Please know that my comment about checking references before hiring anyone was not meant to be a slight on your offer to help. If you have success with Penguin recovery then that is fantastic, and David, you should take Andy up on his offer! I'm just always careful to advise site owners to check references because there are a lot of people out there who claim to be able to recover any Penguin hit site but have never actually done so.
-
"Prior to building the spammy links, did you guys rank well?"
As David said above...
"For a few years we were occasionally #1 on Google in the US for "salmon recipes", but normally we would be between #2 and #4."
And
"In the year from 25th April 2011 to 24th April 2012 the site attracted just over 500k visits."
-Andy
-
Prior to building the spammy links, did you guys rank well? Do you have a good number of truly naturally earned links? If so, then yes, you could recover from Penguin. You will need to do an extremely thorough backlink audit and disavow every link that was self made for SEO purposes.
With that being said, there really haven't been many cases of true Penguin recovery reported. There are many people who say that they can help, but if you are going to hire a company, be sure to ask for references from site owners whom they have helped recover. Don't let them hide behind a NDA. Any site owner that has truly recovered from Penguin would be very happy to give a glowing recommendation.
My personal belief as to why there haven't been many recoveries is that most sites that got into Penguin trouble would not have ranked if it were not for the power of unnatural links. They'll never get that link equity back and as such, disavowing links is not going to cause the site to improve because there are no good links there to support rankings. But, if you've truly got good links then it's worth a try!
-
Hi David,
Whilst I can't go into specifics here, it is somewhat messy in there, including a couple that are even flagged as especially dangerous. I can give you more info if you wish to mail me at info@inetseo.co.uk
However, this isn't the worst I have seen, and have had complete recoveries from those, so all is not lost
-Andy
-
Thanks Andy, it is reassuring to know that no site is beyond help!
We have never received any kind of manual penalty or warning for this site. The decline in rankings was purely algorithmic, with a clear and major drop on 24th April 2012.
It you want to run a quick scan for me, that would be fantastic. I would really appreciate that.
I look forward to hearing from you whenever you have had time to do this.
Huge thanks again
David
-
Hi David,
No site is beyond help. I have worked with sites who have been seeing hundreds of thousands of monthly visitors, only to be hit by Penguin / Panda, and seen later recoveries. What it sounds like you need is to disavow lots of the links that are associated with you now. It certainly isn't something that you need to give up on and shouldn't cost the earth to do it.
I would be happy to run a quick scan for you to give you an idea of what sort of state your link profile is in, if you wish?
Have you had a manual penalty from Google at all, or does this appear to just be algorithmic?
-Andy
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Why google is catching my website late
Hello, I hope you all guys are doing great. Recently, I published my over my website and within almost 10 mins, it was indexed completely and I also personally checked it in google search console. The URL was indexed but the problem is, it does not appear in Google Search. Sometimes in search result I notice Google shows a result who is published 10-30 mins ago but this is not the case with my website. All articles just show in Google SERP after 1-2 days. What can be the reason behind this, although DA, PA is good (28-31).
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | HansiAliya0 -
Hacked Websites (Doorways) Ranking First Page of Google
Hello Moz community! I could really use your help with some suggestions here with some recent changes I've noticed in the Google serps for terms I've been currently working on. Currently one of the projects I am working on is for an online pharmacy and noticed that the SERPs are being now taken up by hacked websites which look like doorways to 301 redirect to an online pharmacy the hacker wants the traffic to go to. Seems like they may be wordpress sites that are hacked and have unrelated content on their websites compared to online pharmacies. We've submitted these issues as spam to Google and within chrome as well but haven't heard back. When searching terms like "Canadian Pharmacy Viagra" and other similar terms we see this issue. Any other recommendations on how we can fix this issue? Thanks for your time and attached is a screenshot of the results we are seeing for one of our searches. 1Orus
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | monarkg0 -
Ecommerce sites we own have similar products, is this OK?
Hello, In one of our niches, we have a big site with all products and a couple more sites that are smaller niches of the same niche. The product descriptions are different with different product names. Is this OK. We've got one big site and 2 smaller subsides in different niches that cross over with the big site. Let me know if Google is OK with this. We will have a separate blog for each with completely different content. There's not really duplicate content issues and although only the big site has a blog right now, the small ones eventually will have their own unique blog. Is this OK in Google's eyes now and in the future? What can we do to ensure we are OK? Thank you.
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | BobGW1 -
How does google view...
I have two urls that are almost the same for example: www.mysite.co.uk/motoring/car_fuel www.mysite.co.uk/motoring/car-fuel both pages are very different, but on the same topic. How does google view the use of _ and - in urls? Will it see my urls as different? Please advise if you know the answer. Thank You.
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | JamesT0 -
Site that's 301 redirected is ranking for brand
We own a number of foreign TLD domains for our brand. They are all 301-redirected to our main .com branded domain. One of them is appearing in our branded search results, outranking out main .com page. To be clear, this is despite there being a 301 redirect from it to the .com page. Any ideas on what is going on here?
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | ipancake0 -
Google SEVERE drop as of last week (oct 10) on long standing .org site
Hello Experts Wanted some imput if possible. I own a .org informational site that has been #1 in its category for Google Yahoo and Bing under a major keyword for years. The site is aged back to 2005 and all of the sudden it dropped on August 10 (Google only- Yahoo and Bing still #1)) but remained atop the primary keywords that it is namesaked for .org (xxxxyyyzzz.org) and then Oct 9-10 it dropped from the page 1 top ranking it had for years on that primary keyword to page 13. I dont know where to begin to look. Any ideas how something like this could happen and what "Stones" I should turn. We purchased the website and are not SEO gurus so just not sure. Any help would be appreciated
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | TBKO1 -
Please help? unique penguin problem with a blogger template
**Can any one help? The problem: **There is a free blogger template on this site http://btemplates.com/2012/blogger-template-crystalweb/ that has a anchor text link to our site using the keyword "wholesale" in the footer, that is the main course of our site being hit with a penguin penalty.**The story so far:**On the 24th April our website dropped out of the serps for our main keywords, traffic has been down 90% ever since, we are a small family run business that relies on the inter-net and goggle for our site to work. Goggle organic serps is about 30% of our turnover and have already had no choice to let 3 people go, problem now is we are left with Me, my Dad and Mum, Both my Brothers and nephew and my wife and my brothers wife so unless we can turn this around I can see us going bankrupt.**What I have done so far:**After the 24th I have learnt a lot about S.E.O , and managed to remove 99% of all bad/spammy links and have now come to a dead end. I have been promoting what we do as a company and promoting our blog over the last 4 months and also built a great twitter/facebook following with lots of re-tweets and shares which we have made some good sales from. We have re-designed most parts of our website and managed to up the conversion rate by 300% We have worked on all aspects of our website to make sure we have little/no duplicate content , have worked on ways to speed up the site and fixed most dead links/404 problems.<var id="yiv904548185yui-ie-cursor"></var>**Now onto our main problem:**After a few weeks of removing links I found a blogger page that kept coming up with the same link, after some detective work I found the template was originally designed by http://www.deluxetemplates.com/ after a few emails we found out that someone paid deluxetemplates to add the link to the site, I'm guessing it was a S.E.O. company we used for 2 years, but they did not admit to this and could not help. A guy called Klodian from deluxtemplates was really helpful and helped remove from his site, also he agreed to a cost of $250 to remove all the pictures on his server to force the blogger's to update, this is what the template from deluxtemplates now looks like vozconuncion.blogspot.co.uk .Now this was only helping fix this issue a small bit as a different site called btemplates also used the template and added it to there website as a free download and hosted the template pictures on there servers. I have emailed a few times, I have sent them twitter messages and also added messages to lots of there templates on there site in the hope they can help, I have also contacted the owner directly on his goggle+1 page but no reply. This template is being downloaded once or twice a day, with no way to get hold of the blogger's using it. As a last resort I offered the owner $1000 to help me remove the template but still no luck.Does anyone have any ideas how to resolve? we are willing to pay to resolve this and will do what ever needs to be done.Thank-you for taking the time to read.Karl.
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | wcuk0 -
Does your website get downgraded if you link to a lower quality site?
My site has a pr of 4. My friends site has a pr of 2 but I think that he is doing some black hat seo techniques. I wanted to know whether the search engines would ding me for linking to (i.e., validating) a lower quality site.
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | jamesjd70