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I have several sites that had held stubbornly to first page for several keywords, and as of last Thursday, they are all suffering big time.
My urls all look like -
[keyword1-keyword2...]
Anyone else seeing this shift?
I have quite a few - domains with the - slash and they all do as well as i have them do. I don't see anything in my industry that says otherwise yet. In other industries I have noticed many sites disapear, could be dup content, filters, and also keywords that people fight alot over (heh and spend a lot of money on adwords)...
Suppose your company has been called "Blue" for the last hundred years.... the domain has gone to a legitimate other company, therefore you have to call yourself "blue - something" which makes sense.
The only hyphen domains that may be damaged are ones with competitive keywords only. Domains with one keyword plus one non competitive keyword are doing fine.
Any problems with keyword only domains may be more because of links in using the domain and thus over cooking the anchor text than the domain itself... in relation to on page factors using those keywords.
Harley-Davidson has a hyphen in their real name, as well as their domain name. Do a search on [harley davidson]. As soon as they disappear from that first spot, then I will believe that Google has been that stupid.
In the mean time, you should assume that there is something else to it.
I have several sites that contain many hyphens. Most of these have been awol in google but remain strong in yahoo.
One of my sites that has 5 hyphens still remains #2 in google, it has been there for over a year and a half now.
I must include that this site was not just thrown together, and has a couple hundred links pointing to it and the url is keyword rich.
Harley-Davidson has a hyphen in their real name, as well as their domain name. Do a search on [harley davidson]. As soon as they disappear from that first spot, then I will believe that Google has been that stupid.
I don't know, BigDave. They have tens of thousands of incoming links and they're clearly the authority site for their own company name. So if there is any lessening of rank for using a hyphen, it would surely be outweighed by these other factors.
If a minor change happens, and your ranking comes crashing down, then you probably should not have been ranking well in the first place.
If it was a significant enough change to boot a well rounded site, especially when the word "penalizing" is being offered up in the original post, then it should hit all hypenated domains to some degree.
And even if H-D is too strong to suffer in that case, look down those search results, there are a lot of other hyphens in that list from sites that do not have the drawing power of the main H-D site.
Yes, but I don't believe that hyphens are the issue.
First, there are plenty of examples, some in very competitive areas, where high ranking pages utilize URL's with 3 or 4 hyphens (domain and/or filename; it doesn't matter).
Second, as has been noted, it's hard to find decent domains anymore without hyphens.
Third, if G ever did such a thing it would unfairly punish too many innocents. G may not care at all about innocents, but they probably don't want to wipe them all out.
Most likely, what people are seeing is simply that some sites that were heavily SEO'd over the past several years at times use lots of hyphens. So as G continues to tighten up its filters and algo, more and more of sites with hyphens are being snared. IMHO, worst case is that too many hyphens *may* raise a red flag ... but I don't even believe that, because I see no evidence, and I do see evidence to the contrary. Hyphens are just too fundamental to too many sites.
Hyphens don't cause Penalties. Too much SEO causes Penalties.
It should be ‘too’ many hyphens as a percentage of total file names, but that should be for any proverbial penalty. There may always be a case (G), or what ever search engine, didn’t predict. If there are a few outliers, that should not be a penalty. Of course that goes for underscores as well. Too many underscores should get you had as well. Or at least I hope (G) and the others are that smart.
Of course, that makes me ask the question, why bother looking at the file names in the first place? Isn’t that dictating to a webmaster how to create their site? There may be reasons why one might need to have every file hyphenated with several hyphens. Like if you have 1000 file names almost the same and a human needs to look at the files. Like a string of numbers for example.
I run a site for a property management company with two hyphens in the name and they went from PR3 to PR4 recently. Very few pages (<20), not much content (yet) but got a PR boost.
But PageRank is only a measure of links pointing to a page -- the domain name, hyphenated or not, has nothing to do with it. A change in PageRank isn't related to any algorithmic change regarding how hyphenated domain names are handled.
Of course, that makes me ask the question, why bother looking at the file names in the first place? Isn’t that dictating to a webmaster how to create their site?
Maybe. But if you want to take that point of view, isn't looking at how any on-page element is used "dictating to a webmaster how to create their site?"
Why bother looking at file names? Same reason a search engine takes into consideration the contents of heading tags, the title, bold text, or whatever -- because it can be an indicator of what the page is about.
Your right of course, but here is my point.
My domain name is made up of 2 combined KW’s and an abbreviated, (aa), KW. The abbreviated KW is as useful as utters on bull, so we have KWKWaa.com.
When I do a search for KW (space) KW, (G) highlights KWKW together even though the KW’s were put in as 2 words. So they have the ability to take a two word search term and return sites that the domain name makes up a compound word of the KW’s.
They could just as easily remove the hyphens and underscores and any other character that is above or below ASCII xx and rank all returns based on making all filenames and domain names a single compound word. But they didn’t do that. Therefore all domain names and filenames would have the same weight. Question is why did they not do this? This would give the same weight to all domain names and filenames w/o regard to an individuals preference or required maintenance procedures.
The only reasons I can think of for them to do that is to trap smaller sites where indivuals do their own SEO or SEOs that are just starting out because they feel those sites and/or SEOs are not deserving of being on page one or two or page X of the SERPs. Maybe there is another more logical reason for it, but I can’t think of it. Can anyone else?
Putting on my conspiracy theory hat, there appears to be something going on over at (Y) as well. Coincidence? There were posts around here not to long ago about hyphens having more weight that underscores. If a (G) and/or (Y) employee started or contributed to the ‘which carries more weight’ discussion, (we use to call it putting a bug in someone’s ear), they could be fishing for the self-SEO sites and thus they would know who’s reading that topic here and acting on the information.
Now it may just be coincidence, but, it could be view as suspicious that both (G) and (Y) appear to be changing their SERPS at about the same time. If further research could prove that some sites and/or pages in (Y) are changing for the same reason, the –‘s and _’s for example, then they would put the smaller sites out of business forever because (G) and (Y) account for a huge amount of all search activities, like what 90%, and end their problem of smaller sites and/or SEO’s doing SEO. Of course that would be a big anti-trust issue that would absolutely rock the industry. I have seen companies before join forces to conquer a viewed common enemy, and those types of anti-trust things like price fixing go on even today.
[edited by: jim_w at 10:49 am (utc) on June 3, 2004]
wellzy
wellzy
I'm starting to not see it as that either, I see it as a change issue, not if you have one or the other, but if and how many were changed and/or added since date X. So they compare your older results with the newer ones. If you have been changing, you’re had. This could also explain why (G) was having troubles with 301’s. Of course it is just a conspiracy theory.
i always use underscores regardless of keyword separation debates, i just think they look better. now i have reason to believe that google agrees with me...can't hurt to follow their lead.