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Went from #6 to dropping off the face of the planet this update for my main keyword phrase - ouch. ;_(
My site is keyword-hyphenated domain - and no, it's not spammy - the hyphenated phrase is part of the name of the company itself and describes exactly what I do.
It's PR 6 with 198 backward links (including DMOZ & Yahoo).
I don't understand how it could be #6 and then not worth a rat's tail in Google's opinion from one month to the next, but I'll try not to be bitter. :-)
I have 3 main sites and I'm getting ready to start a 4th. Two of the three are virtual hosting with the same company, same IP (also have 4 more UNRELATED sites on the same - don't know if that matters or not).
I hate not being able to say what it is that it's actually about, but I'll used the old tired widget example:
Site 1 sells widget-related service, site 2 sells same service, BUT different package (more variations, quicker delivery, different price; basically a better, more comprehensive, and more expensive version) aimed at different market. On site 1, I have a link that says something like, "need faster service? visit our sister site..."; there is a link from site 1 to site 2 there, but nowhere else. There is no link from site 2 to site 1.
Questions:
Is the virtual hosting thing killing me?
Should I not link at ALL between the two? That seems incredibly, insanely stupid if Google penalizes me for that.
Should I change to my non-hyphenated domain? (There are still tons of hyphenated ones in my results -even one that repeats the phrase 3 times in the top 20, so Google's being selective if they're dropping sites for that).
Should I change alt text and image names to strip all keywords? The ALT text may be a bit spammy, but the image names are logical (widget-portfolio.html, for example is similar to how I have mine).
Or, just wait it out hoping that a page they seemed to like up until now might bounce back up next month?
As someone else said, I've put all my eggs in the Google basket; so, it's time to diversify. I shouldn't have counted on traffic from them so much anyway, but it's just frustrating to have an extremely relevant site to the keyword phrase I fell for and then for no logical reason, drop off the face of the Earth.
Hello PPC. :-(
Jenny
Also: Before doing anything drastic I'd wait a couple of days at least.
Things like: hyphenated domains are out! Virtual hosting equals PR0! Reciprocal linking gets penalized! etc are conclusions that should not be drawn yet.
Reading all the theories posted the last two days makes one thing quite clear: nobody has a definite answer yet.
Please Keep in mind they may be trying to turn Webmaster/SEO salaries into Adwords revenues, making us irrelevant by making cash oriented categories totally disfuncional. At disfuncional categories our work will be worthless, forcing Webmaster/SEO costumers to pay totaly inefective Adwords fees. Bad, bad, SF boys.
We are in a excelent position to report those mayor glitches, by the way. Did you notice Googleguy asking repetely us to report them? Could be that giving Google the option to repair potentialy embarrasing glitches, is not the smarter course of acction we can take. Not before the mud hits the fan.
On the other hand, Google may revert the change, rendering your changes useless, avoiding hurting consumers, and making a lot of Webmaster/SEO people happy. So, I will said not change needed.
[edited by: Marcos at 4:30 pm (utc) on Sep. 29, 2002]
Thanks. Yes, I did make a few minor adjustments already that needed to be made. I had been putting them off for a while so as not to jeopardize my ranking (up until this month). I hope you're right about the algo.
Heini,
Thanks for being the voice of reason. You're right. I see a lot of these posts and get worried I'm going to get killed for virtual hosting, etc. Thanks for your observations. I guess I'll adopt a "wait and see" attitude until next month.
Jenny
So far it seems apparent to me that richness of content is being weighted even more emphatically in the new algo. Page rank is still a factor, but seems to have been given less weight. Also, I don't yet buy the theory that hyphenated-keyword domains have gone the way of the buggy whip. DMOZ and Yahoo listings do not necessarily carry the day. My initial impression, again, is that content has been made even more kingly
I believe some patterns will begin to emerge over the coming month, and the watershed changes brought about by this update will become clearer.
so it seems the spam/link whatever effects on widgets destroys the search relevance.
In general, we judge a page by its links and content.
Straight from GoogleGuy today!
[webmasterworld.com...]
Other than that, I would...
1) Get more themed inbound links from others in your industry
2) Create more pages of valuable, unique content
3) If you don't have CSS yet, get it up on your site and clean out all redundant code and try to trim down on JS as much as possible and have them load externally.
These things in general will not hurt your site no matter what Google does, in my opinion.
I have worked hard on doing all the above and it has done nothing but pay off for me. Good luck.