I have recently switched from a html site to a Wordpress based one...
-
Obviously all my indexed links have changed. How can I avoid loosing page rank?
-
Thanks for the explanation - I've got a better understanding of what is going on.
I think 301 Redirects are going to be the way to go. Some PR should be passed along to the new target page, though I imagine a significant amount will be lost due to the lack of relevant content to the user. I agree that the bounce rate will be higher, and the degree of that change will be directly related to how much overlap the new and old pages have. At the very least, though, you won't have 404 errors.
I'm not aware of any risk of penalty from the search engines as a result of redirecting an old page to an unrelated, or less-related page, but you may want to research a bit or check with other resources to make sure. That would be my only concern, though it doesn't seem to me that it likely to become an issue.
If you continue using 301 redirects, you may want to consider installing a plugin into wordpress to help you execute and manage them. I haven't used any, but I searched around a little bit and found some options.
If interested, you can check out:
http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/redirection/
or
http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/search.php?q=301+Redirect&sort=
for other options.
Hope this helps.
-
Hi Kelly,
To give you a quick background as to how we got here...
We have consolidated allot of the pages from our old site into one page. Our strategy was to let our suppliers websites expand on the machine range, and we concentrate more on the solution with the customer. The descision of what kind of specific machines our customers need usually comes later on in the sales cycle.
Our site now talks more about 'the application' rather than the individual equipment (we sell machines).
Potential prospects will normally search for 'laser cutting machinery' as opposed to 'TRUMPF TruLaser 3050" (which is a laser cutting machine model). Pages with individual machinery was what our old website was all about. This is why allot of the pages that have been indexed will no longer have a home :O(
To cut a long story short, we would like to pass page rank of what's out there to our new pages, but to a certain degree, I am expecting this not to work so well as the new content will not 100% support what the searcher is obviously expecting. I'm guessing we will simply yield higher bounce rates.
I have gone through my top 70 +/- indexed pages that are high stake for us and manually added a 301 redirect in htaccess (I know, you're probably laughing). There are still another 200 or so pages out there which will land as a 404. This is my main concern and I guess this is what this post is all about. 404 = loss of site integrity.
Few! I'm done. :O)
-
So I understand a little better, what is your goal with the pages that no longer exist on the new site? Is it to pass page rank of those pages that are no longer hosted on the web to those that are now live on the new (WP) version of the site? Or am I missing something?
-
Thanks Kelly. That actually helped with an issue I wasn't aware of. But what about the pages that are out there that are no longer available on the new site... not with the indexed URL anyways..
When I do a site: query in Google, I can see hundreds of products that have been indexed and are going to specific url's - www.domain.com/machine/machine_one.html etc which no longer exists.
I have customised my 404 page to read something like "The page you are looking for has permanently been moved due to our new website structure... etc" but it's still a page not found in the search engine's eyes.
Thanks again for you help
-
Hi Maurice,
I apologize - it seems that there was a period connected to the link I posted before. Try this one: http://www.seosteve.com/seo-best-practices/redirecting-index-html-after-a-wordpress-migration.html
-
Hi Kelly, links seems to be invalid. Thanks for your reply!
-
I also was interested in information concerning this topic, and did some research. I found the following article to be helpful: http://www.seosteve.com/seo-best-practices/redirecting-index-html-after-a-wordpress-migration.html. I hope this helps.
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
-
Same person on my site, every day, for over 6 months??
I watch my Google analytics real time while I work and for the last 6 months, I've had one person on my site consistently during every Monday to Friday. It's only the home page there go on, it never shows they look anywhere else. But it's starting to concern me a little since it's been going on for so long. Does anyone have an idea what they could be doing? I do my own SEO, there is no one else working on my site. Thanks in advance!
Reporting & Analytics | | Coppell0 -
Does subdomain (or sub sub domain) affect analytics data of root site?
We self-host our public website, but over time have also added subdomains onto it that are not public and are for internal or even client portals. I am seeking advice as to whether those subdomains affect the analytics data (self referrals, visits, bounces) of the public site that I am tasked with analyzing. I feel that it does skew the data but need to build a solid case to move the public website to a new domain, so as to leave the existing one in tact with all of its subs.
Reporting & Analytics | | MarketingGroup0 -
How Am I Linked to These Sites?
I was going through Google Analytics, specifically looking at the Channels under Acquisition. I found a number of sites that Google is giving credit as sources of traffic.
Reporting & Analytics | | TowerMarketing
When I went to the sites, however, and searched the page source for links to my site, I could not find any. My site is www.towermarketing.net. The sites being listed by GA are:
blackhawkhardware.com
musicas.baixar-musicas-gratis.com If anyone can tell me how Tower is getting traffic from these sites, and what I can do to fix it - because at this point I am considering them spam - I would appreciate it. Thanks!0 -
Ok. I'm just going to cut loose with my stupid question. What is internal link equity? What distinguishes an internal link with equity from one without equity?
What distinguishes an internal link with equity from one without equity? Is there a limit to how many of these I want? What's the rule-of-thumb? Cheers, Wes
Reporting & Analytics | | wrconard0 -
How is it possible that this site has a higher page authority than my site?
Judging by open site explorer, I'm crushing my competitor in every imaginable way. And yet, somehow they have a higher page authority than me and, consequently, are ranking higher than me. How is this possible? My site is on the left: 40atcpP.png
Reporting & Analytics | | ScottMcPherson0 -
How does Google sort multiple websites in one GWT account?
Today I noticed one of our sub-domains listed in our Google Webmaster Tools Account moved from the 6th position to the 2nd position. Is there a reason for this (perhaps urls/sites listed at the top require the most attention)?
Reporting & Analytics | | Prospector-Plastics0 -
Switching Google Analytics from Urchin to GA
I want to finally make the switch from Urchin to GA in Analytics, but the Google support page is no longer working (I realize I'm late to this so they likely took it down/moved it to where I can't find it). I've been searching on Google but can't find a straightforward guide to changing that won't disrupt my data. Anyone have a link to a working guide, or can you provide some guidance?
Reporting & Analytics | | Axios_Systems0 -
Should we add the city to our keywords for a site that is only local?
This is one of those things I have done for a long time and all of a sudden asked myself was it necessary: For our local clients, we add the city name (Houston, KC, Birmingham) after each keyword. An example would be TestSite.com/big-tester-houston A Title Tag might be Big Tester Houston | Test Site, etc. Where appropriate we do the same with H1 or H2's and occasionally in the content we will use the city name. The thought being that since the site is only for a given city, it will be deemed more relevant than a site from outside.( I understand there are other factors in SEO; this is a specific question around adding the city). Yes, we also optimize with local directories/citation sites. Is this overkill, is it even worthwhile? Is there any evidence one way or another? I would love some strong opinions backed up with something other than anecdotal evidence where possible.
Reporting & Analytics | | RobertFisher0