Forum Moderators: open
I still had the test domain linked to the same site.
So I had www.my-actual-domain.com *and* h*ttp://the-testing-domain.com.
Unfortunately, there were two major links of the old domain on a couple of pages, which would then send spiders around the entirety of the site in the old name.
All inbound links (quite a few now) are to the new domain.
I've now deleted the old domain links and google is still deep-crawling.
Do you think I've gotten away with that, or am I in trouble and at risk of being banned?
Thanks,
A slightly panicked TJ.......
All of the inbound links are to the proper domain, so I hope that outranks the test domain (no inbound links except two ones in error from deep internal pages from the main site).
Both those internal links have been removed. May have just got there in time before googlebot got down that far. Time will tell......
Most stupid mistake I've ever made, but I can be sure that it won't happen again!
All other webmasters - learn from my mistake and don't make it yourself! Life's too short already!
TJ
When I click on "similar pages" from a google search for us, it comes up with nothing.
If I search also in google for "the-test-domain.com" in google, it also comes up with nothing.
I'm hoping that's a good sign that the test domain has simply been dropped.
TJ
Hope this helps.
<added>
What you also need to think about is a 301 will not only redirect se spiders it will also redirect surfers, This can be usefull if you have a domain that is likely to attract type in visits. They type in the easy name and get sent direct to your site. Sometimes this can be off putting to the user though, they may think they are on the wrong site.