Thanks for your help David - I apologize for my delayed response.
Posts made by dkeipper
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RE: URL Parameter for Limiting Results
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URL Parameter for Limiting Results
We have a category page that lists products. We have parameters and the default value is to limit the page to display 9 products. If the user wishes, they can view 15 products or 30 products on the same page. The parameter is ?limit=9 or ?limit=15 and so on. Google is recognizing this as duplicate meta tags and meta descriptions via HTML Suggestions. I have a couple questions.
1. What should be my goal? Is my goal to have Google crawl the page with 9 items or crawl the page with all items in the category?
In Search Console, the first part of setting up a URL parameter says "Does this parameter change page content seen by the user?". In my opinion, I think the answer is Yes.
Then, when I select how the parameter affects page content, I assume I'd choose Narrows because it's either narrowing or expanding the number of items displayed on the page.
2. When setting up my URL Parameters in Search Console, do I want to select Every URL or just let Googlebot decide? I'm torn because when I read about Every URL, it says this setting could result in Googlebot unnecessarily crawling duplicate content on your site (it's already doing that). When reading further, I begin to second guess the Narrowing option. Now I'm at a loss on what to do.
Any advice or suggestions will be helpful! Thanks.
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Company sells home appliances and commercial appliances. What is the best way to differentiate the two on our site for the best user experience/SEO?
Should we structure it starting at the homepage with the user selecting for home or for business, that way they have to make a selection before moving further OR should we somehow differentiate in the navigation using the top menu tabs, dropdowns, etc?
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RE: Page Rank Worse After Optimization
Thanks Dirk -
I will try out your suggestions and let you know my results. I appreciate your help.
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RE: Page Rank Worse After Optimization
Hi Dirk -
It's actually another website, not included in my profile.
The page is: http://www.1-800-shaved-ice.com/simply-a-blast-snow-cone-machine.htmlI did the same optimization with some other pages, and we are ranked number 1 on the first page. These are the pages that have done extremely well.
http://www.1-800-shaved-ice.com/c-hc-8e.html
http://www.1-800-shaved-ice.com/swanblocshav.htmlThanks for your feedback
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Page Rank Worse After Optimization
For a long time, we had terrible on page SEO. No keyword targeting, no meta titles or descriptions. Just a brief 2-4 sentence product description and shipping information. Strangely, we weren't ranking too bad. For one product, we were ranking on page 1 of Google for a certain keyword.
My goal to reach the top of page 1 would be easy (or so I thought).
I have now optimized this page to rank better for the same keyword. I have a 276 word description with detailed specifications and shipping information. I have a strong title and meta description with keywords and modifers. I have also included a video demonstration, additional photos and an PDF of the owners manual.
In my eyes, the page is 100% better than it ever was. In the eyes of MOZ, it's better also. I've got an A with the On-Page Grader.
Why is this page now ranking on page 8 of Google? What have I done wrong? What can I do to correct it?
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RE: Should extra content be added to item page or resource center?
Definitely will follow up with this. Thanks!
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RE: Should extra content be added to item page or resource center?
Thank you so much for your feedback!
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RE: Should extra content be added to item page or resource center?
Thank you so much for your feedback!
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RE: Should extra content be added to item page or resource center?
Thank you so much for your feedback!
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RE: Should extra content be added to item page or resource center?
Thank you so much for your feedback!
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Should extra content be added to item page or resource center?
We run an ecommerce company which sells machines. After the machine is used for X amount of time, we suggest changing the blades in the machines. We have a resource center for customer convenience.
We are creating videos and content on how to change the blades in each machine. (each machine is a different process).
Do we create videos and content in the resource center and link to the product page or do we beef up our content on the product page by adding that information there?
1 part of us thinks - "The new blade-changing content" is valuable to that product so buyers know the process before buying and hopefully gain some rank juice on the item pages.
The other part of us thinks - Keep all resources in the resource center and link to learning resources from the product pages. This version doesn't beef up our product pages but seems to be the logical place to hose the content on the website.
Thoughts? Suggestions?
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RE: Google "blog" search
I search by doing this: "your blog topic" blog
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RE: Irrelevant page with high bounce rate
I would do some keyword research and find out exactly what keywords you need to be targeting. That page has a lot of information about floor plans. If you're not looking to be ranked for floor plans, consider changing your keywords.
First, think about the person who is looking for that page. What would they be searching for? Maybe "Hawaii Vacation Rental Floor Plan"? "Vacation Rental Floor Plan"? "Floor Plans for Waikoloa Vacation Rentals"? My gut says you won't rank for Vacation Rental Floor Plan. It's probably too competitive. Really target that page around some new keywords and write some solid content for the top or bottom of the page (maybe a couple of paragraphs above the plans and a couple below. Create some keyword rich content and you might start seeing a difference in your bounce rate. Hope this helps. -
RE: Which speed test to use?
Hi -
http://www.webpagetest.org/ is a great resource. I also use YSlow (plugin for web browser). YSlow is great at telling you what's causing the high page load times. Hope this helps.
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RE: E-commerce category page optimization - filters vs. categories
Hi! Try checking out this link and see if it helps. Faceted navigation can get tricky.
http://moz.com/blog/building-faceted-navigation-that-doesnt-suck -
RE: SEO and former site
Unfortunately not really. Google will notice it's gone and will dig into the new link structure. You could include an xml sitemap to help the crawlers understand your site, but it's going to take time to gain value in those new URLs. You may consider (if it's not too late), 301 redirecting the old pages to the new pages and pass some of the old SEO value to the new site. Those new URLs have no SEO value until people start clicking, linking, etc. Good luck and optimize as hard as you can. Of course, this is my option and if you get other feedback from elsewhere, I'd love to hear about it.
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RE: SEO and former site
When you shut the old website down and moved to a new server, did the URLs change at all? Did the internal link structure change at all? If so, that's probably the number one problem. I noticed the domain authority is only a 15/100 and there aren't many external links to the site. That could have something to do with it. If you're targeting the keyword "San Diego Criminal Defense Attorney", you may want to include that keyword more often. I noticed it four times on the homepage but that keyword is battling against all the other content. Try incorporating that keyword about four times every 250 words or so. Without doing a site audit, it's hard to pinpoint exactly what is causing it to rank low. Just my opinion. Hope it helps.
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RE: If I mention a client in a blogpost about SEO, do I have to use a rel= no follow link?
I'd say it depends on what current external links they have and what your domain authority looks like. If you've got a great domain authority, you will definitely help him out. If the client has no or very few external links, it would help them for you to endorse their services. I don't think they would be penalized for the link. It's legitimate and not spammy.