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Why Haven't Sites Come Back from Panda? Matt Cutts Tries to Explain

         

walkman

6:49 am on Jun 8, 2011 (gmt 0)



This is a rush(?) transcript from Dany Sullivan's blog so probably not everything is 100% correct. The italics and bolding are mine.
[searchengineland.com...]
DS: Talking about Panda, says that he’s getting a ton of emails from people who say that scraper sites are now outranking them after Panda.

MC: A guy on my team working on that issue. A change has been approved that should help with that issue. We’re continuing to iterate on Panda. The algorithm change originated in search quality, not the web spam team.
....
DS: Has it changed enough that some people have recovered? Or is it too soon?

MC: The general rule is to push stuff out and then find additional signals to help differentiate on the spectrum. We haven’t done any pushes that would directly pull things back. We have recomputed data that might have impacted some sites. There’s one change that might affect sites and pull things back.

DS: You guys made this post with 22 questions, but it sounds like you’re saying even if you’ve done that, it wouldn’t have helped yet?

MC: It could help as we recompute data. Matt goes on to say that Panda 2.2 has been approved but hasn’t rolled out yet.

DS: Reads an audience question – is site usability being considered as more of a factor?

MC: Panda isn’t directly targeted at usability, but it’s a key part of making a site that people like. Pay attention to it because it’s a good practice, not because Google says so.

Matt mentions 'pull back' but that's nonsense and very disingenuous of him. Pull back to me means letting a previously labeled bad content rank. We're talking about improved sites and content, no need to pull back, just reanalyze it.

So it's clear to me that this is a penalty. Maybe if you got links from every newspaper in the Northern Hemisphere you might escape but for the rest it looks like it depends on Google engineers. It took them 3+ months to admit it.

fakedsysadmin

5:54 am on Jun 11, 2011 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I've always built websites following Brett's "Successful Site in 12 Months with Google Alone".

My websites were not affected by Panda.

IMHO, I think now it's easier to build websites a la Brett and at the same time get good rankings without having to use tricks to compete with spam.

heisje

10:32 am on Jun 11, 2011 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



This is a business.


Not exactly:

Google is a monopoly (65% share in the US, 95% in Europe) blatantly, intentionally and maliciously abusing dominant position and restricting trade, for its own profit, while damaging and/or ruining other businesses.

Their PR mantra : all this is for the sake of the consumer. Anti-trust law begs to differ.

We shall see . . . . . .

.

superclown2

10:50 am on Jun 11, 2011 (gmt 0)



I think the strategy for post-Panda should be like yours, in addition to a major site /s. one should do 200 or so word SEO-ed and pretty mych Made For Google 'sites' that target specific money terms. Link them from your existing one and see if they rank. If they rank, great, if they don't it makes no sense to complain given the amount of time spent. You just try with another money term.


Walkman, are you speaking here of single page, 200 word sites? Or sites with multiple pages with 200 words each? I'm a bit uncertain why they should take a week, they are obviously not as simple as they may seem.

Incidentally, if you link them from your existing sites it may be better to make sure that they are not all listed as yours in WMT. I found with a number of new sites that I had indeed listed that as soon as I linked to them from an existing site they fell out of the SERPs. A prety easy target for the panda, really.

Shatner

11:19 pm on Jun 11, 2011 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The fact that we've had 5 pages debating what Matt Cutts said I think is a clear indicator of the problem.

Google isn't being clear about anything. It's all doublespeak.

Why are we even listening anymore?

shallow

12:31 am on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



@Shatner
Why are we even listening anymore?


I was hoping, based on the title of this thread. But, imho, it's just Don Quixote chasing after windmills. If there is any reversing of Panda, no matter what the degree, it will be in spite of all the concerns expressed by those who have been hit by it so badly. We're basically at the mercy of Google.

leadegroot

1:00 am on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I do think that if you are sure your site is a false positive, ie you either didn't need to make changes, or you've done the changes and it looks good - and yet you haven't come back, that the next step is to do some link building.
I have this feeling that the sites linking to you having been pandalised means your backlink profile has dropped enough that the on-site quality can't currently carry the site.
IMHO - certainly worth trying. Obviously wouldn't be the time to pick up a bunch of junk links, though!

walkman

1:22 am on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)



Walkman, are you speaking here of single page, 200 word sites? Or sites with multiple pages with 200 words each? I'm a bit uncertain why they should take a week, they are obviously not as simple as they may seem.

No sir, that was another person here that has apparently escaped Panda by doing such sites. Maybe it's a way to prosper? Each page of mine has about that many words in just a somewhat tangent but informational section, and then I show what what the title says.

The point I'm making is that if you are in that situation, it is better to painstakingly go through all of them and convert them into real useful unique pages, then to simply hit the delete button. Because those pages will have been linking to other pages on your site, and zapping them without getting fresh external links will leave your remaining pages dangerously unsupported.
Some pages are tags, that unless you are Huff Post will probably hurt you and many others are "Send-page.pl?774" and the likes. I did suspend quite a few of mine to bring them back later and deleted some since I see no prospect in them (less than 10% of pages). I looked at the links and even at googlebot seeking deleted pages and 301d them. I assume that they had a link from somewhere.

Bottom line about mass deletions: very few people can take a chance with Google, and if Google thinks that their site has still too many 'bad' pages they will be without an income for good know how many more months. Remember it's an inconsistent and ever-changing robot doing the sorting so people are painting with a broad brush hoping to be safe.

Some of course have tens of thousands of them so it's impossible to do them one by one.

Freedom

2:33 am on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



How many Panda versions are there?

I am convinced one happened on June 6. With one in Feb, one in April, one in May and another on June 6.

That makes four that I've felt.

If he's talking about another one, I'm sick to my stomach already.

Whitey

3:27 am on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

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



I have this feeling that the sites linking to you having been pandalised means your backlink profile has dropped enough that the on-site quality can't currently carry the site.

Good point.

Some of the stories about this being heavily weighted towards "social signals" and pure onsite are misleading folks to remedies which alone will be limited. You comment is well spoken.

walkman

7:14 am on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)



Whitey, back-link profile isn't the issue with my pandalized site as afar as I can tell, several sites that link me got higher traffic so even Panda dilutes links this can't be it. Those alone should be enough for a lot more than the measly traffic I get from Google now. Just looks, to me, that Google is still in the penalize mode and then they will start looking to re-run Panda, relax it or whatever you want to call it. Matt Cutts compared it to the Florida update where after casting a wide net they started to 'pull back' (bring sites back?) but this Panda is almost 4 months into it.

It's amazing, nothing you do makes a difference, zilch. Remove pages like Google said, let Google index /remove them, nothing. Add content to existing pages, let google take them every 2 days, nothing changes, other than on site factors ( I tested that by adding a specific title, it works.) Traffic goes down in my pandalized site, rises on my non-Pandalized sites usually at the same time. And there quite a few of the pandalized sites here and other forums seem to move in unison, up and down within a tight margin.

Matt was asked several times on Panda recoveries, even Danny Sullivan got the impression that Panda recovery is more than just changing your site, it depends on Google too for most if not all pandalized sites:
but it sounds like you’re saying even if you’ve done that, it wouldn’t have helped yet?


Regarding social and other signals: Google probably has to use signals that apply to all sites and use them conservatively to avoid too much collateral damage. They do test them from time to time probably in the SERPS and pull back some, add others and so on.

superclown2

9:14 am on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)




I do think that if you are sure your site is a false positive, ie you either didn't need to make changes, or you've done the changes and it looks good - and yet you haven't come back, that the next step is to do some link building.
I have this feeling that the sites linking to you having been pandalised means your backlink profile has dropped enough that the on-site quality can't currently carry the site.
IMHO - certainly worth trying. Obviously wouldn't be the time to pick up a bunch of junk links, though!


I tried that on several sites which promptly fell further. Caution recommended.

dazzlindonna

1:13 pm on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



According to a Forbes article today, "On Tuesday Google will announce new tweaks to its Internet search service." No idea if it will have anything to do with Panda or not, though.

chrisv1963

3:22 pm on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



that the next step is to do some link building


Translated: Link buying or building spam blogspot pages to link back to your site.

I sent DMCAs for more than 50 blogspot pages today. Each of them had copied texts from my website ... with in text links to other websites.

danny

7:07 pm on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I thought I was immune to Google problems - 1200+ book reviews, been around forever (either 11 years or 17 depending how one counts it), simple clean design with Amazon links but not much else, unrequested backlinks from all over, nothing even slightly dodgy - but I've been hit now. Half my reviews have been pushed out of the index by random duplicates with no standing, the other half rank nowhere, and Google traffic is down by maybe 70% or more.

The advice on the Google webmaster forum is that my site is a bit tired and I should jazz it up a bit. But I like Web 0.5!

steerpikegg

7:19 pm on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



@Danny

I have been following your thread on the Google forum.

IMHO it won't make a blind bit of difference if you redesign the look of the site. People on the google forum don't have the first clue what they are talking about.

My betting is that if you change the site you'll damage your serps even further.

supercyberbob

7:46 pm on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



It would seem that Danny's drop in rankings is a good example of how messed up some of the serps are.

If these issues are not addressed in the next update, G is gonna get hell in the press.

If nothing else, these guys need to be more honest with what's going on with the algo.

londrum

7:50 pm on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

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



danny: i'm just interested to know if your site might be suffering a little bit because of those new preview images in the SERPs. did your traffic drop a little bit when that was brought in?

AlyssaS

7:50 pm on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Danny - I think your site is a really good one. It looks great, loads fast, it's simple to use. I wouldn't mess with the template or look - it works well as it is.

The only thing I can think of is that perhaps you need a bit more text on the homepage.

As to why G dropped you - I think it's to do with Amazon links on all your review pages. For instance, you have a review linked from your home page for a PD James book called "Talking About Detective Fiction".

If you google "talking about detective fiction" (without quotes), amazon.com comes up top.

I think the new algo assumes that if amazon is in the top ten, then an affiliate also touting amazon is superfluous to requirements, regardless of whether they have value that the amazon pages does not have.

Are you able to subsitute those amazon affiliate links with another bookseller? Says Barnes & Noble (I think they are on the google affiliate network). It's worth a try - you lose nothing, as your traffic has tanked - some sales through barnes and noble and the other publishers (I think Random House have an affiliate program through shareasale, most publishers have one) is better than no sales with amazon because G is penalising amazon sites.

P.S. if it doesn't work, you can always put the amazon links back. Switching affiliates is not a drastic change though it may be time consuming.

serenoo

7:59 pm on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



About 10 days ago I changed my website. Layout is completely different. Nothing is happened to my serps. Always the same number of visitors from Google.

walkman

8:05 pm on Jun 12, 2011 (gmt 0)



I would try Alyssa's suggestion since you lose nothing, but I am not sure if amazon links are it or not. Scidev.net has zero ads and top notch content, yet it has been slammed with a 60% drop in traffic. Turns out they are a non-profit funded by several Western govs to spread knowledge to the world [en.wikipedia.org...] . They are a PR8 and with a back-link profile to make jealous almost any webmaster. Traffic matters to them since they use it to justify funding, and since their mission is to be read as much as possible it matters even more. Content farm they are not, that much is certain.

Road and Travel Magazine also reported the same pandalization in Google forums. One by one they are making their case as desperation sets in.

[edited by: walkman at 8:09 pm (utc) on Jun 12, 2011]

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