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scared to change my content

will i be penalized

         

indiandomain

9:18 pm on Oct 13, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



my site has been ranked and its spidered well.
im just so scared to change the content of my website,add banner ads etc.

how will google react to a change?

BlueSky

9:27 pm on Oct 13, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



In my limited experience, I found the Googlebot loves fresh and updated data.

Powdork

9:29 pm on Oct 13, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



In general, in less you're getting rid of a lot of content (or switch to a navigation format which limits spiderability) you shouldn't have to worry. If you are changing your content so that it does not match your incoming anchor it may also have some effect. If you are adding banners to the top of your page, be sure to keep the code at the bottom. Have a good idea of which keyword sets are bringing in the traffic and try to protect those if they still apply to the business. You must also consider how these changes relate to any directory listings you may have or any content labeling (PICS, ICRA) you may have.

indiandomain

9:29 pm on Oct 13, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



is it ok if u update the entire content or should i do it gradually?

nancyb

9:43 pm on Oct 13, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



make sure you follow Powdork's suggestions, they are what is important.

I've updated my entire site all at once several times over the years. I also continually update older pages and add new ones and/or change the overall layout and/or color scheme.

Problems might arise only if you ignore what is currently working for you - the current navigation structure, content, incoming and internal links, anchor text, <Hx> tags, etc. because all of these are part of the ranking algorithms in one way or another.

If you have changed the entire site layout and rewritten all the text you would want to analyze these changes, but hopefully you planned that carefully before you reworked the site :)

ronin

12:10 am on Oct 14, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



This is crazy. No site designer should be living in fear of Google.

It's Google's job to find the most useful and well-designed sites. Its reputation is at stake on precisely this issue.

So, if you factor well-formed markup, standards compliancy and accessibility into an easily navigable interesting and useful site... then if Google doesn't rank you very highly at first it soon will, because _it will look bad_ if it doesn't!

I know that SEO involves a certain amount of looking at the positions of the search engines, but in general, I strongly believe that site designers should concentrate on designing excellent sites and let the search engines chase after them... rather than chasing after the search engines themselves.

When I'm designing pages I think about Google a little bit, but I think about well-formed markup and accessibility and intuitive navigation a great deal more.

Powdork

2:52 am on Oct 14, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



When I'm designing pages I think about Google a little bit, but I think about well-formed markup and accessibility and intuitive navigation a great deal more.
Agreed, the user comes first. But it would be shooting yourself in the foot to switch all your links to flash, or javascript, regardless of how intuitive the structure appears.