Thanks for the feedback. I agree, it seems to be google specific.
Scratch that, webmaster tools is showing manual action. Now the fun part...
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Thanks for the feedback. I agree, it seems to be google specific.
Scratch that, webmaster tools is showing manual action. Now the fun part...
I'm a bit baffled by this one and would love if someone in the community could help provide some clarity!
In general, my website (PSG1.com) is indexed and cached correctly. The exception is that the homepage is actually cached as plasticsurgerygroupnewjersey.com, another domain we own.
At one time, I used the Moz toolbar to view attributes and it registered PSG1.com as having a response code of both 200 and 301 to plasticsurgerygroupnewjersey.com. However, I cannot replicate this.
Any idea why the homepage of PSG1.com is not indexed/cached correctly? I appreciate your wisdom!
TJ,
Why send the source info through the form? Are you passing it your CRM or something?
I typically just utilize Google Analytics to track the source. You can set a custom variable with the lead's name into GA if you want to match up leads.The avantage is that you can also track other lead sources like organic, social, etc. in addition to PPC.
Of course, if you're doing really high volume, this isn't real efficient.
-Rick
Could always give it a whirl...
Here's what I'd do.
First, check big stuff like:
If neither of the above, I'd next dig deep with analytics to try to figure out if there is a certain pages, type of pages (product page, articles, blog, etc), etc. that have taken the biggest hit.It may give you more direction. Could also:
You could always try blocking new stuff but you never know how long it's gonna take google to come back and honor your changes.
Maybe try some keyword themed around military/army/navy + preparation?
'Bootcamp' fitness stuff is huge right now (especially with crossfit and similar stuff becoming so popular) so it's gonna be challenging.
Really depends on the products you're selling. I do like Rob's answer about keeping the page live and offering an alternative or capturing an interest list. You still want the sale or to create the lead so providing some sort of call to action is key if these are significant.
If the product is never coming back, I'd def redirect to a close match or a parent category.
Can you give away products? Maybe target a few influential bloggers and send them a product sample for review?
As long as you redirect them to a URL with campaign tracking variables "?utm_source=Banner&utm_medium=referral" there shouldn't be an issue.
Well said, I agree. There's too much uncertainty. I'd be shocked if anyone could guesstimate (at the keyword-level) with any decent level of accuracy. Overall % improvements are a bit easier to ballpark guesstimate.
Hey Leigh,
First off, I'd say that your #2 concern would be a great problem to have! I'd rather own 2 of the top listings than just 1!
In scenarios where product-level optimization is not feasible/efficient/etc, I'd try to get as many data points on each product as possible and do 'form optimization'. I see that your initial descriptions are going to be similar. You should enhance them a bit using product attribute info. It takes a bit of programming but worth it in the long run!
Do you have other product attributes which can be worked into each product page template?
Maybe stuff like:
In this case, you can enhance your descriptions with that data. For example, your product page template would look like:
The [Insert Ring Name] is a [Insert material] [Insert parent category name] available in a variety of sizes including [insert size options, comma separated]. The [insert product name] is available [insert availability attribute] and usually ships [insert fulfillment time].
Would yield something like this on a specific product page:
The 14k yellow gold ring is a yellow gold wedding ring available in a variety of sizes including 1,2.3 and 4. The 14k yellow gold is available year round and usually ships in 1-week.
We're still seeing form optimization work pretty well as long as:
O yeah, not sure of your sales volume but push the h*ll out of getting customers to write reviews and make sure the reviews appear in a SE friendly way on the product pages themselves for added uniqueness.
See where I'm going with this? Hope this helps and good luck!
Here's the google help doc on trackpageview: http://www.google.com/support/analytics/bin/answer.py?answer=55529. Or you could use event tracking: http://code.google.com/apis/analytics/docs/tracking/eventTrackerGuide.html.
Hola,
We've moved a number of sites for similar political reasons. It's always frustrating as an SEO!
We almost always have seen some drop-off for obvious reasons. Sometimes that drop-off has been less 5%, other times closer to 30% depending on the precautions that business owners were willing to take. Sounds like you're going to do redirects and do the webmaster tools request. 2 tips:
Best of luck. It's not an ideal situation but usually isn't the end of the world if you're in it for the long haul (unless your in a crazy competitive market)!
Tell your boss that the website's flux capacitor will get overloaded without a good meta description.
Hey Gary,
I partially agree with Cafe. However, I wouldn't remove any redirects for URLs which may have backlinks. Maybe it would be a good idea to figure out if any of the redirects which you are removing are from URLs that have earned links? An Open Site Explorer link export would help you figure out if any of those URLs still have value.
Per Google's recommendations, I'd change the links to the new website.
I think it could be argued differently but, if the products are identical, I'd pick one of the categories and try to keep the SE's out of the other. Probably be best to pick the category that will apply to most 'prospects'. Could use canonical, disallow in robots, etc.
You can't apply tiered pricing via your CMS and display wholesale pricebreaks? Then you could just link to the same product page (URL) from each different category.
Wp e-Comm is "okay" out of the box, but is missing stuff. Just make sure you install the Yoast Wordpress SEO plugin and that will fix the rest and give you specific control over the category/product page titles, meta, etc. It's a great plugin to use in combination with WP eCom.
Yahoo can be ssssllllllooooowwwww.
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