Huge google index with un-relevant pages
-
Hi,
i run a site about sport matches, every match has a page and the pages are generated automatically from the DB. pages are not duplicated, but over time some look a little bit similar. after a match finishes it has no internal links or sitemap entry, but it's reachable by direct URL and continues to be on google index. so over time we have more than 100,000 indexed pages.
since past matches have no significance and they're not linked and a match can repeat and it may look like duplicate content....what you suggest us to do:
when a match is finished - not linked, but appears on the index and SERP
-
301 redirect the match Page to the match Category which is a higher hierarchy and is always relevant?
-
use rel=canonical to the match Category
-
do nothing....
*301 redirect will shrink my index status, some say a high index status is good...
*is it safe to 301 redirect 100,000 pages at once - wouldn't it look strange to google?
*would canonical remove the past matches pages from the index?
what do you think?
Thanks,
Assaf.
-
-
In terms of what you've written, blocking a page via robots.txt doesn't remove it from the index. It simply prevents the crawlers from reaching the page. So if you block a page via robots.txt, the page remains in the index, Google just can't go back to the page and see if anything has changed. So if you were to block the page via robots.txt, and add a noindex tag to the page, Google won't be able to see the page with the noindex tag to remove it from the index because it's blocked via robots.txt.
If you moved all of your old content to a different folder, and block that folder via robots.txt, Google won't remove those pages from the index. In order to remove them from the index, you would have to go in to Webmaster Tools and use the URL removal tool to remove that new folder from the index - if they see it's blocked via robots.txt, then and only then they'll remove the content from the index - it has to be blocked via robots.txt first in order to remove the whole folder with the URL removal tool.
I'm not sure though if this would work for the future - if you removed a folder from the index, and then added more content that was indexed previously afterwards, I'm not sure what would happen to that new content moved to that folder. Either way, Google will have to come back and recrawl the page to see that it has moved to the new folder, and then remove it from the index. So either way, the content will only be removed once Google recrawls the old content.
So I still think a better way to remove the content from the index is to add the noindex tag to the old pages. To facilitate the search engines reaching these old pages, I'd make sure there is a way the engines can get to them - make sure there is a path they can take to reach them.
Another good idea I saw on a forum post here a while ago would be to create a sitemap containing all of these old pages you have indexed and want removed. Add the noindex tag to the sitemap - using the Webmaster tools sitemap interface, you'll then be able to monitor the progress of deindexation over time - by checking how many pages on the sitemap/s of the old content are originally indexed as reported by webmaster tools, and then you can see later on how many of those pages are still indexed, this will be a good indicator for you of the progress of the deindexation.
-
Dear Mark,
*i've sent you a private message.
i'm starting to understand i've a much bigger problem.
*my index status contain 120k pages while only 2000 are currently relevant.
your suggestion is - after a match finishes pragmatically add to the page and google will remove it from it's index. it could work for relatively new pages but since very old pages don't have links OR sitemap entry it could take a very long time to clear the index cause they're rarely crawled - if at all.
- more aggressive approach would be to change this site architecture and restrict by robot.txt the folder that holds all the past irrelevant pages.
so if today a match URL is like this: www.domain.com/sport/match/T1vT2
restrict www.domain.com/sport/match/ on robots.txt
and from now on create all new matches on different folder like: www.domain.com/sport/new-match-dir/T1vT2
-
is this a good solution?
-
wouldn't google penalize me for removing a directory with 100k pages?
-
if it's a good approach, how much time it will take for google to clear all those pages from it's index?
I know it's a long one and i'll really appreciate your response.
Thanks a lot,
Assaf.
-
there are a bunch of articles out there, but each case is different - here are a few:
http://www.searchenginejournal.com/the-holy-grail-of-panda-recovery-a-1-year-case-study/45683/
You can contact me via private message here on the forum and I can try to take a more in depth look at your site if you can give me some more detailed info.
-
yes. when the 1st Panda update was rolled out i've lost 50% of the traffic from google and haven't really recovered since.
-
Are you sure you got hit by Panda before we talk about a Panda hit?
-
Thanks Mark!
any good article about how to recover from Panda?
-
Exactly - I'd build a strategy more around promoting pages that will have long lasting value.
If you use the tag noindex, follow, it will continue to spread link juice throughout the site, it's just the individual page with the tag will not be included in the search results and will not be part of the index. In order for the tag to work, they first have to crawl the page and see the tag - so it doesn't happen instantaneously - if they crawl these deeper pages once every few weeks, once a month, or even longer, it may take a while for these pages to be removed from the index.
-
Hi Mark
-
these pages are very important when they are relevant (before the match finished) - they are the source of most of our traffic which come from long tail searches.
-
some of these pages have inbound link and it would be a shame to lose all this juice.
-
would noindex remove the pages from the google index? how much time it would take? wouldn't a huge noindex also look suspicious?
-
by "evergreen pages" - you mean pages that are always relevant like League page / Sport page etc...?
Thanks,
Assaf.
-
-
Hi Assaf,
(I'm not stalking you, I just think you've raised another interesting question)
In terms of index status/size, you don't want to create a massive index of empty/low value pages - this is food for Google's Panda algorithm, and will not be good for your site in the long run. It'll get a Panda smack if it hasn't already.
To remove these pages from the index, instead of doing hundreds of thousands of 301 redirects, which your server won't like either, I'd recommend adding the noindex meta tag to the pages.
I'd put a rule in your cms that after a certain point in time, you noindex those pages. Make sure you also have evergreen pages on your site that can serve as landing pages for the search engines and which won't need to be removed after a short period of time. These are the pages you'll want to focus your outreach and link building efforts on.
Mark
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
-
Getting Google to index our sitemap
Hi, We have a sitemap on AWS that is retrievable via a url that looks like ours http://sitemap.shipindex.org/sitemap.xml. We have notified Google it exists and it found our 700k urls (we are a database of ship citations with unique urls). However, it will not index them. It has been weeks and nothing. The weird part is that it did do some of them before, it said so, about 26k. Then it said 0. Now that I have redone the sitemap, I can't get google to look at it and I have no idea why. This is really important to us, as we want not just general keywords to find our front page, but we also want specific ship names to show links to us in results. Does anyone have any clues as to how to get Google's attention and index our sitemap? Or even just crawl more of our site? It has done 35k pages crawling, but stopped.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | shipindex0 -
Google Indexing Of Pages As HTTPS vs HTTP
We recently updated our site to be mobile optimized. As part of the update, we had also planned on adding SSL security to the site. However, we use an iframe on a lot of our site pages from a third party vendor for real estate listings and that iframe was not SSL friendly and the vendor does not have that solution yet. So, those iframes weren't displaying the content. As a result, we had to shift gears and go back to just being http and not the new https that we were hoping for. However, google seems to have indexed a lot of our pages as https and gives a security error to any visitors. The new site was launched about a week ago and there was code in the htaccess file that was pushing to www and https. I have fixed the htaccess file to no longer have https. My questions is will google "reindex" the site once it recognizes the new htaccess commands in the next couple weeks?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | vikasnwu1 -
Google Index Status Falling Fast - What should I be considering?
Hi Folks, Working on an ecommerce site. I have found a month on month fall in the Index Status continuing since late 2015. This has resulted in around 80% of pages indexed according to Webmaster. I do not seem to have any bad links or server issues. I am in the early stages of working through, updating content and tags but am yet to see a slowing of the fall. If anybody has tips on where to look for to issues or insight to resolve this I would really appreciate it. Thanks everybody! Tim
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Toby-Symec0 -
Google local pointing to Google plus page not homepage
Today my clients homepage dropped off the search results page (was #1 for months, in the top for years). I noticed in the places account everything is suddenly pointing at the Google plus page? The interior pages are still ranking. Any insight would be very helpful! Thanks.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | stevenob0 -
Urgent Site Migration Help: 301 redirect from legacy to new if legacy pages are NOT indexed but have links and domain/page authority of 50+?
Sorry for the long title, but that's the whole question. Notes: New site is on same domain but URLs will change because URL structure was horrible Old site has awful SEO. Like real bad. Canonical tags point to dev. subdomain (which is still accessible and has robots.txt, so the end result is old site IS NOT INDEXED by Google) Old site has links and domain/page authority north of 50. I suspect some shady links but there have to be good links as well My guess is that since that are likely incoming links that are legitimate, I should still attempt to use 301s to the versions of the pages on the new site (note: the content on the new site will be different, but in general it'll be about the same thing as the old page, just much improved and more relevant). So yeah, I guess that's it. Even thought the old site's pages are not indexed, if the new site is set up properly, the 301s won't pass along the 'non-indexed' status, correct? Thanks in advance for any quick answers!
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | JDMcNamara0 -
Google & Bing not indexing a Joomla Site properly....
Can someone explain the following to me please. The background: I launched a new website - new domain with no history. I added the domain to my Bing webmaster tools account, verified the domain and submitted the XML sitemap at the same time. I added the domain to my Google analytics account and link webmaster tools and verified the domain - I was NOT asked to submit the sitemap or anything. The site has only 10 pages. The situation: The site shows up in bing when I search using site:www.domain.com - Pages indexed:- 1 (the home page) The site shows up in google when I search using site:www.domain.com - Pages indexed:- 30 Please note Google found 30 pages - the sitemap and site only has 10 pages - I have found out due to the way the site has been built that there are "hidden" pages i.e. A page displaying half of a page as it is made up using element in Joomla. My questions:- 1. Why does Bing find 1 page and Google find 30 - surely Bing should at least find the 10 pages of the site as it has the sitemap? (I suspect I know the answer but I want other peoples input). 2. Why does Google find these hidden elements - Whats the best way to sort this - controllnig the htaccess or robots.txt OR have the programmer look into how Joomla works more to stop this happening. 3. Any Joomla experts out there had the same experience with "hidden" pages showing when you type site:www.domain.com into Google. I will look forward to your input! 🙂
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | JohnW-UK0 -
How to Optimize Product Page for Better Ranking in Google?
Today, I was searching for product page SEO on Google for better optimization of product pages and category level pages. I want to introduce about my website structure. Root category: http://www.vistastores.com/outdoor Sub category: http://www.vistastores.com/outdoor-umbrellas End level category: http://www.vistastores.com/patio-umbrellas Product page: http://www.vistastores.com/patio-umbrellas-california-umbrella-slpt758-f13-red.html I'm doing link building for sub category & end level category page. But, I'm not able to do inbound marketing for product level URLs due to resource problem. But, I have checked that... There are many competitors who are rank well with long trail keyword... I'm selling same product but not ranking well... What is reason behind it? I don't know... Just look at Olefin Red Patio Umbrella search result. I want to rank in top 3 with this kind of long trail keywords... I have made study of following video and article. http://www.seomoz.org/blog/ecommerce-seo-making-product-pages-into-great-content-whiteboard-friday http://www.distilled.net/blog/seo/in-search-of-the-perfect-seo-product-page/ I have done all things which were described by them... But, I'm still waiting for good ranking...
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | CommercePundit0 -
How do I index these parameter generated pages?
Hey guys, I've got an issue with a site I'm working on. A big chunk of the content (roughly 500 pages) is delivered using parameters on a dynamically generated page. For example: www.domain.com/specs/product?=example - where "example' is the product name Currently there is no way to get to these pages unless you enter the product name into the search box and access it from there. Correct me if I'm wrong, but unless we find some other way to link to these pages they're basically invisible to search engines, right? What I'm struggling with is a method to get them indexed without doing something like creating a directory map type page of all of the links on it, which I guess wouldn't be a terrible idea as long as it was done well. I've not encountered a situation like this before. Does anyone have any recommendations?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | CodyWheeler0