Why has my site dropped to page 2?
-
I haven't been paying attention to my sites SERP for the past year, and only realized I've dropped to page 2 on a keyword search.
Specifically, on Google.ca, searching the keywords "wedding invitations"
My site, www.stephita.com, used to consistently rank in the top 3 links. While my competitors have leapfrogged me.
I realized that my site wasn't "mobile-friendly", and had a few other issues like keyword stuffing, long meta descriptions and titles. I've fixed these issues "now", but wanted to know does this mean my site was severely penalized by the Panda/Penguin updates for the last few years?
Does having a PR3 site mean anything? My competitors who our rank me on SERP, are all PR1 sites.
Greatly appreciate any feedback you can give me!
-
Yes, I've removed all the "shortcuts" of bad thin content now.
But I'm a little confused by your comment:
But anyone who looks closely at these cookie cutter pages will see that the wording is awkward, the photos don't match the names or the colors listed, and problems like Oren & Bar Mitzvah sneak in.
Do you see something in particular that is bringing this to your attention?
-
When a site is hit by Panda, most pages of the site suffer a rankings decline. There are different levels of Panda severity. Sometimes the losses might be just a couple of positions, other times the losses might drop many positions.
You seem to have a nice business and you've gotten away with using shortcuts to create your content for a while. But anyone who looks closely at these cookie cutter pages will see that the wording is awkward, the photos don't match the names or the colors listed, and problems like Oren & Bar Mitzvah sneak in.
It's time to invest the time needed to do a proper job. That's what most people who have Panda problems and want to get out of them are doing.
-
As always, I appreciate your knowledgeable feedback on these issues.
I'm cleaning up my site, and removing some of the 'black-hat' SEO techniques that I had thought worked 5 years ago... I had created a script to generate "doorway" pages on my site.
i.e., if you searched "wedding invitations" + random city, like "wedding invitations thornhill, wedding invitations richmond hill, wedding invitations brampton, etc...
http://www.stephita.com/wedding/invitations/thornhill
http://www.stephita.com/wedding/invitations/richmond+hill
http://www.stephita.com/wedding/invitations/brampton
My site is listed on the first page for most of these "wedding invitation city" type searches.
Assuming my site has already been "Panda Demoted", does it make sense that these links are still on the first page for those "long tail searches"? Is it because of these specific pages that my site's index page (www.stephita.com) has been demoted in SERP when searching for the broader "wedding invitations" locally? ** I hope I am making sense here **
I used to have links in the footer and sitemap that would lead crawlers to these "doorway pages", but I have removed all traces of it from the site now. How long will the pre-existing indexed pages live in their results? Should I take steps to pro-actively remove them?
-
Is it re-calculated daily, or only when there are Panda updates (how often?)?
Nobody knows how often google injects new Panda evaluations into the ranking results. It's really irrelevant because the sooner you improve the content of your website the sooner your visitors will have a quality experience. Thin pages can produce a negative impression of your business on the visitor, especially when your competitors have done an excellent job.
**I'm just thinking in the case where I create 1000 product display pages, does that mean I would really need to write 1000 content HEAVY pages? **
Generous content is the cost of becoming competitive. The fact that you realize that and make it happen gives you a huge advantage over your competitors.
**If my site is built 80% product pages, and I suddenly add the NOINDEX meta tag, will that negatively impact the result? **
Nobody really knows the answer to this. If I had a site that was 80% thin product pages, I would delete them instead of noindexing such a large part of the site. Each time you improve one into a good substantive page and publish it, that page will become and asset that pulls traffic and converts visitors.
Is there a "magic number" of number of words to make it a suitable content page?
Since you have a walk-in store, you probably have a lot of experience with customers. Take that experience and produce a page that explains the product, answers common questions, counters objections, explains the questions that they should have asked but didn't.
My main focus for any searchers is to reach my main index page.
I don't agree with that goal. Most of the people who purchase from my sites never see the homepage. They land on a product page from search and add an item to the cart. They might land on an article that I have written and use a house ad or a link to my store and then buy the product. I am quite confident that if many of these customers landed on naked pages I would have never gotten their business.
-
If you remove all your thin content you are sure to bypass panda and you wouldn't be penalized.
And there aren't really a magic number of number of words to make a suitable content page but make sure that the html and content ratio is 70% to 30%.
-
I'll make an effort to improve the THIN content pages. Assuming I've "fixed" all issues that the Panda Algo doesn't like - how "soon/long" would it take to be "out of demotion". Is it re-calculated daily, or only when there are Panda updates (how often?)?
Is there anyway to flag a "product page" so that Panda wouldn't look at it? I'm just thinking in the case where I create 1000 product display pages, does that mean I would really need to write 1000 content HEAVY pages? -- Sorry, I just realized there is the META NOINDEX method...
If my site is built 80% product pages, and I suddenly add the NOINDEX meta tag, will that negatively impact the result? Or would that benefit me in this situation? It was never my intention for any searchers to land on any direct product page. My main focus for any searchers is to reach my main index page.
Is there a "magic number" of number of words to make it a suitable content page? (i.e. NOT-THIN)
I really appreciate you helping me out with this!
-
Would Google penalize me for having THIN content then?
I would be very surprised if your site does not currently have a Panda demotion. Most of the links in your persistent navigation lead to thin content. If you decide to improve these pages it is really important that the content be unique, very different from page to page and substantive.
Another method of escaping Panda is to remove thin content from the site. Here is an article by Marie Haynes that explains how a couple sites improved after thin content removal.
Lastly, does PageRank matter anymore? My site was a PR3 - does that matter when the other local competitors that have leapfrogged me are all PR1s?
PageRank can be important. However, your search results are heavily influenced by the geographic location of the searcher and their distance from your location.
If I owned your site, my priorities would be to improve it by a combination of content writing and thin content removal, then put my main effort into optimizing and promoting my site for local search.
-
Thanks for giving me a better understanding of how Panda works.
I agree, I'm targeting my local market, but I noticed when using "google.ca" (vs. .com) Searching for the keywords "wedding invitations" (without Toronto), does yield a few of my local competitors (along with the big boys like vistaprint) that have leapfrogged me this past year....
So if my site had, hypothetically speaking, 1000s of product pages, but with a simple one line description, along with photo and price to be simple. Would Google penalize me for having THIN content then?
Lastly, does PageRank matter anymore? My site was a PR3 - does that matter when the other local competitors that have leapfrogged me are all PR1s?
-
Panada is a part of the Google algorithm that looks at the quality of a website. If a website has lots of duplicate pages or thin content pages then Google will demote the rankings of the entire website.
Google's recommended way of fixing the problem is to improve the content of those pages by adding substantive, relevant, unique content that is useful for the visitors. You could easily do this for your site. It will simply take a dedicated effort to improve those pages.
Will that enable you to compete effectively with vistaprint, etsy, partycity and others? I am not optimistic it will.
However, you might be able to optimize and promote your site so that it appears in local searches such as "toronto wedding invitations". I see you on the first page, but with some work and investment you might be able to get a better position on both the page and the map results.
-
Thanks for your feedback!
Yes, I agree, I feel that my page 1 placement was more due to my searches based on my geographic location. That is my biggest concern at the moment, that other customers in my area are not finding my site anymore.
I'll definitely remove those footer links that serve very little purpose other than to direct users to content that they can get from the main navigation.
To get a better idea of how Panda works, or Google Search Algo in general... does it look at my site as a "whole" when it scores the value of sending users to my index page?
For pages on my site that obviously are only meant as a "product" with simple photo, sku and price. Does that mean it would see it as very thin content, and penalize my site as a whole?
-
The query "wedding invitations" is quite competitive.
If I look at the .ca SERPs I see well-known, highly deserving, world class brands at the top such as vistaprint, etsy, zazzle, partycity.
Your site is on page three for me.
Perhaps when you searched in the past, Google delivered some personalized SERPs on the basis of your past browsing history or on the basis of your geographic location.
Is your site penalized? It would not surprise me if you have a Panda problem. There are a lot of thin content pages on your site. Clicking on the keyword links in the footer of the site yields pages with an image, a name, and really nothing more. Many of the links in the top navigation produce pages that are about the same. If you don't have a Panda problem yet, you will probably have one soon.
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
-
Do you use HREF lang tags when each page that is localised only exists in that language?
Hi, I have 2 questions I am seeking an answer for. We have a home page in english GB, we then also have products which are specifically served in US. For these pages where the phone number is american, the spelling is american, the address is american, do we need to implement href lang tags? The page isn't a version of another page in english, the page is only in the native language.Secondly, is it recommended to create a second home page and then localise that page for US users?I'd be really greatful if anyone has any pointers as googles forum doesn't explain best practice for this case (as far as I can tell).Many thanks
Local Website Optimization | | Adam_PirateStudios0 -
SEO Company wants to rebuild site
Hello Community, I am a designer and web developer and I mostly work with squarespace. Squarespace has SEO best practices built into the platform, as well as developer modes for inserting custom code when necessary. I recently built a beautiful website for a Hail Repair Company and referred them to several companies to help them with SEO and paid search. Several of these companies have told this client that in order to do any kind of SEO, they'll need to completely rebuild the site. I've seen some of the sites these companies have built, and they are tacky, over crowded and hard to use. My client is now thinking they need to have their site rebuilt. Is there any merit to this idea? Or are these companies just using the knowledge gap to swindle people into buying more services? The current site is : https://www.denverautohailspecialists.com/ Any advice would be appreciated.
Local Website Optimization | | arzawacki2 -
URL and title strategy for multiple location pages in the same city
Hi, I have a customer which opens additional branches in cities where he had until now only one branch. My question is: Once we open new store pages, what is the best strategy for the local store pages in terms of URL and title?
Local Website Optimization | | OrendaLtd
So far I've seen some different strategies for URL structure:
Some use [URL]/locations/cityname-1/2/3 etc.
while others use [URL]/locations/cityname-zip code/
I've even seen [URL]/locations/street address-cityname (that's what Starbucks do) There are also different strategies for the title of the branch page.
Some use [city name] [state] [zip code] | [Company name]
Other use [Full address] | [Company name]
Or [City name] [US state] [1/2/3] | [Company name]
Or [City name] [District / Neighborhood] [Zip Code] | [Company name] What is the preferred strategy for getting the best results? On the one hand, I wish differentiate the store pages from one another and gain as much local coverage as possible; on the other hand, I wish to create consistency and establish a long term strategy, taking into consideration that many more branches will be opened in the near future.1 -
HTML Page in PHP Website
Does having an HTML page in a PHP website affect SEO? I have a PHP website but one of my targeted pages have an HTML page. Will it cause any harm to the website or is it fine to have a html page in a PHP website?
Local Website Optimization | | plinggtre670 -
How to approach SEO for a national umbrella site that has multiple chapters in different locations that are different URLS
We are currently working with a client who has one national site - let's call it CompanyName.net, and multiple, independent chapter sites listed under different URLs that are structured, for example, as CompanyNamechicago.org, and sometimes specific to neighborhoods, as in CompanyNamechicago.org/lakeview.org. The national site is .net, while all others are .orgs. These are not subdomains or subfolders, as far as we can tell. You can use a search function on the .net site to find a location near you and click to that specific local site. They are looking for help optimizing and increasing traffic to certain landing pages on the .net site...but similar landing pages also exist on a local level, which appear to be competing with the national site. (Example: there is a landing page on the national .net umbrella site for a "dog safety" campaign they are doing, but also that campaign has led to a landing page created independently on the local CompanyNameChicago.org website, which seems to get higher ranking due to a user looking for this info while located in Chicago. We are wondering if our hands are tied here since they appear to be competing for traffic with all their localized sites, or if there are best practices to handle a situation like this. Thanks!
Local Website Optimization | | timfrick0 -
Our rankings are all over the place but mostly keywords are dropping
our rankings are all over the place but mostly keywords are dropping from 2-20 to 35 and over 51. it has been happening over the past 3 weeks but don't know what to look for. any advise is appreciated. stevesautorepairva.com . our other automotive website hometownetire.com seems to be doing better but do not know why. they are 2 separate businesses. Thank you very much in advance for any help. AqDQnRx
Local Website Optimization | | ifixcars0 -
What is the Best Keyword Placement within a URL for Inner Location Pages?
I'm working on a website with 100s of locations. There is a location search page (Find Widget Dealer), a page for each state (Tennessee Widget Dealers) and finally a page for each individual location which has localized unique content and contact info (Nashville Widget Dealer). My question is is related to how I should structure my URL and the keywords within the URL. Keywords in my examples being the location and the product (i.e. widget). Here is a quick overview of each of the 3 tiered pages, with the Nashville page being the most optimized: Find Widget Dealer - Dealer Page only includes a location search bar and bullet list links to states Tennessee Widget Dealers - Page includes brief unique content for the the state and basic listing info for each location along with links to the local page) Nashville Widget Dealer - Page includes a good amount of unique content for this specific location (Most optimized page) That said, here are the 3 URL structure options I am considering: http://website.com/widget-dealers/tennesee/nashville http://website.com/dealers/tennesee-widget-dealers/nashville http://website.com/dealers/tennesee/nashville-widget-dealer Any help is appreciated! Thank you
Local Website Optimization | | the-coopersmith0 -
Is this an example of bad doorway pages or perfectly fine and helping users?
I'm asking because I want to do something similar. http://bit.ly/1puGXJu Imagine hundreds of pages like this, with the city names switched out. Since the inventory is different on each page, due to different inventory in different cities, are these pages not considered doorway pages and Google will probably be fine with them?
Local Website Optimization | | CFSSEO0