How long to reverse the benefits/problems of a rel=canonical
-
If this wasn't so serious an issue it would be funny....
Long store cut short, a client had a penalty on their website so they decided to stop using the .com and use the .co.uk instead. They got the .com removed from Google using webmaster tools (it had to be as it was ranking for a trade mark they didn't own and there are legal arguments about it)
They launched a brand new website and placed it on both domains with all seo being done on the .co.uk. The web developer was then meant to put the rel=canonical on the .com pointing to the .co.uk (maybe not needed at all thinking about it, if they had deindexed the site anyway). However he managed to rel=canonical from the good .co.,uk to the ,com domain!
Maybe I should have noticed it earlier but you shouldn't have to double check others' work! I noticed it today after a good 6 weeks or so. We are having a nightmare to rank the .co.uk for terms which should be pretty easy to rank for given it's a decent domain.
Would people say that the rel=canonical back to the .com has harmed the co.uk and is harming with while the tag remains in place? I'm off the opinion that it's basically telling google that the co.uk domain is a copy of the .com so go rank that instead.
If so, how quickly after removing this tag would people expect any issues caused by it's placement to vanish?
Thanks for any views on this. I've now the fun job of double checking all the coding done by that web developer on other sites!
-
Yeah, if the .com is blocked now, there's really no point in putting 301s or canonicals over there, because they won't do anything (theoretically, at least). You could put self-referencing canonicals on the .co.uk site. It would at least be a nudge to Google to ignore the old canonicals (to the .com). Other than that, you may have to wait and see.
As Alan said, you could 301-redirect the .com and then stop blocking it. Properly redirected, no visitors should be able to view the old pages. In some ways, that's even more reliable than blocking.
Update: Sorry, realized that was a bit confusing, as I sort of told you that a 301 was pointless but then to 301 What I'm saying is that you could stop blocking the .com and THEN 301-redirect it. If it really is fully blocked, 301-ing it probably won't have any impact (although it won't hurt anything).
-
If the .com is de indexed, then i would either get rid of it, or 301 it to the .uk
-
Dr Pete,
The whole thing has been one issue after another with the client. One of those helpful clients whom change their website and page structure without telling you. First you hear about it is when they call you wanting to know why their rankings have dropped!
The idea was to move away from the .com site and use the .co.uk site, however they had a lot of people visiting the .com and wanted to keep that as a live site. What should have been done (what I advised them on) was to canonical from the .com to the uk site, telling google that the uk domain is now the main domain. Helpful and rather impressively their web developer managed to put the canonical tag on the .co.uk domain telling google the .com was the main domain.
Then, the .com got involved in a trademark dispute so they decided to remove it from the google listings via webmaster tools (it is still removed as it still ranks for the trademark keyword when it's unblocked). The long and short of it was they ended up in a position which the site they wanted to be ranking was being ignored by google in favour of the site they blocked from google!
I guess now it's a question of just waiting for google to recrawl the .co.uk and see the tag has gone. It's a basic seo error on my part but I would have trusted an experienced web designer to copy and paste a code I gave him on to the correct site.
Don't you just love the clients which won't give you ftp access and insist all changes go through their web developer who is freelance!!
Thanks for the help on this everyone
Carl
-
I'm thinking the same thing - if possible, the 301 might help override the canonical. Sometimes, in my experience, if you reverse a signal (like rel-canonical) with that same signal, Google takes it's time to re-evaluate, because the reversal just looks odd. The 301 here might be more insistent.
The link profile and other signals should help, but I've seen reversing a bad canonical take weeks. It's a tough signal to undo.
Is the .com site still blocked, though? If you canonical'ed to a blocked site and now are trying to reverse it, but the site is still blocked, Google won't crawl the new signal (the same would be true for 301s). If the .com is blocked somehow and you remove the bad canonical, Google may act more quickly (since canonicalizing to a blocked site would seem strange).
-
I would not do anything, it will sort out soon enouth. I dont think it will happen first crawl, as i remeber google saying that they dont honer redirects first time as you may be making changes when crawled, so it may a take a few crawls, also it is not clear if you get all link juice back when it is crawled or when the pages that link to you are crawled. to explain further, if i had a link pointing to you, would the link juice point back to your .uk when your page gets crawled, or when i get crawled?
My guess you will start seeing value return over a period, from day one (as most sites get a few pages a day crawled) up untill a couple of months.
-
Would a 301 from .com to .co.uk work better?
-
the dreaded call to the client, I dont envy you, but be open and honest and all will work out for the best.
Aas SEOs were supposed to notice the finer details, but were only human.
In the past I've put these 'issues' down to 'communication problems with the clients outsourced develeopers', perhaps they should cosider moving development to you guys
-
Thanks for the reply.
Hopefully the large number of backlinks to it will mean it gets recrawled very quickly. I had spent weeks trying to work out why I could get the .co.uk homepage indexed in google now I know why. Now comes a nice call to the client, eek! Thankfully the web design works freelance and is employed by the client not me
-
Hi MisterG,
I feel your pain and learnt the same lesson a few years back. Now i double check everything our devs do.
I agree with you that the canonical is tell Google to go rank the .com as its the authorative owner of the co.uk's content.
How log its going to take to remedy after sortig out the canonical is anyones guess. I suppose it depends on how often you get crawled (deeply).
Be patient and cross your fingers! (oh and dont be too harsh on the devs, they are simple logical creatures!)
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
-
Canonical error from Google
Moz couldn't explain this properly and I don't understand how to fix it. Google emailed this morning saying "Alternate page with proper canonical tag." Moz also kinda complains about the main URL and the main URL/index.html being duplicate. Of course they are. The main URL doesn't work without the index.html page. What am I missing? How can I fix this to eliminate this duplicate problem which to me isn't a problem?
Technical SEO | | RVForce0 -
Wiki/Knowledge bases
Hi A client of mine is creating a knowledge base/wiki for their website. There using there suppliers own knowledge base (basically their a reseller). What would be the best practice with regards to duplicate content. Would it be best to make all the pages "no follow"? and block the pages by the robot.txt?
Technical SEO | | Cocoonfxmedia0 -
WordPress - How to stop both http:// and https:// pages being indexed?
Just published a static page 2 days ago on WordPress site but noticed that Google has indexed both http:// and https:// url's. Usually I only get http:// indexed though. Could anyone please explain why this may have happened and how I can fix? Thanks!
Technical SEO | | Clicksjim1 -
Site Map Problems or Are They?
According to webmaster tools my Sitemap contains urls which are blocked by robots.txt Our site map is generically generated and encompasses all web pages, whether I have excluded them using the robots.txt file As far as I am aware this has never been an issue until recently. Is this hurting my rankings and how do I fix it? Secondly, webmaster tools says there is over 5,000 error/warnings on my site map. But site map is only 1,400 or so pages submitted. How do I see what is going on?
Technical SEO | | Professor0 -
Correct Redirect method for switching pages from .html to /pretty urls/
I have a customer that has all his site files as .html extensions and i'm going to rebuild this site into a wordpress site for easier management, regarding the new permalink structure, should i just do a 301 redirect on this?
Technical SEO | | tgr0ss0 -
Problem with Rel Canonical
Background: We check to make sure that IF you use canonical URL tags, it points to the right page. If the canonical tag points to a different URL, engines will not count this page as the reference resource and thus, it won't have an opportunity to rank. If you've not made this page the rel=canonical target, change the reference to this URL. NOTE: For pages not employing canonical URL tags, this factor does not apply. Clearly I am doing something wrong here, how do I check my various pages to see where the problem lies and how do I go about fixing it?
Technical SEO | | SallySerfas0 -
Canonical efficiency
Hi, I'm creating recommendations for one of my client's site. It's a news site highly based on a regional aspect. One of the main features would be that you can navigate on a high level, we call it inter-regional (with all the regions news) and on the regional level (with only news related to the region) which act as a filter which means that most of my content will be duplicate. To allow the user to navigate the site on the two levels means that all the news pages will be duplicated, one with the inter-regional URL and one with the regional URL. Example: http://www.sitename.com/category/2011/11/07/name-of-the-article http://www.sitename.com/region-name/category/2011/11/07/name-of-the-article The regional URL is the official one, since it has all the keywords I want, and I'm planning to have a canonical on both version with the regional URL. Is there a risk that this would affect my ranking? Any alternatives? I read that I could prevent SE to crawl inter-regional articles using my robot.txt but I'm not fond of that. Thanks!
Technical SEO | | Pherogab0 -
Home Page Indexing Question/Problem
Hello Everyone, Background: I recently decided to change the preferred domain settings in WM Tools from the non www version of my site to the www version. I did this because there is a redirect from the non www to the www and I've built all of my internal links with the www. Everything I read on SEO Moz seemed to indicate that this was a good move. Traffic has been down/volatile but I think it's attributable mostly to a recent site change/redesign. Having said that the preferred domain change did seem to drop traffic an additional notch. I made the move two weeks ago. Here is the question: When I google my site, the home page shows up as the site title without the custom title tags I've written. The page that displays in the SERP is still the non www version of the site. a site:www.mysite.com search shows an internal page first but doesn't return the home page as a result. All other pages pop up indexed with the www version of the page. a site:mysite.com (notice lack of www) search DOES SHOW my home page and my custom title tags but with a non www version of the page. All other pages pop up indexed with the www version of the page. Any one have thoughts on this? Is this a classic example of waiting on Google to catch up with the changes to my tiny little site?
Technical SEO | | JSOC0