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RJPawlick198

: Is it a good idea to change URL scheme of an established website to match query? I'm targeting queries are in the form: "X Y for Z" Website is very established (1M+ traffic), but the competitor

@RJPawlick198

Posted in: #CleanUrls #Ranking #Seo #UrlParameters

I'm targeting queries are in the form:
"X Y for Z"

Website is very established (1M+ traffic), but the competitor with URLs /X-Y/for/Z got to the 1st place (we were a first place for years).

Our URLs are in the form /X-Y/something?A=Q&B=Z

Is it a good idea to rewrite our URLs to match a target query (to be same as competitors)? If we rewrite we will be using 301 permanent redirects for old URLs.

Or it is too risky to hurt rankings even more and a probablity to improve very low?

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@Shanna517

Changing URLs is very risky. As your website is already established, it is dangerous. Your challenges would be


Handling all the external links that leads to your site.
Internal Links - Sometimes it is possible to overlook how the content is linked internally & How you can resolve.
Is it OK if the traffic goes down suddenly? Because we cant quite tell how Google and Other search engines see the URL changes. If you don't execute well, you may be get penalized. Well, I am not sure about it but it is one possibility.


And I might have missed few more points in the list as well.

And finally, As suggested by the many other webmasters it is not good to take a decision on URLs. But there are many other soft ways to achieve top position.

Have you reviewed your on-page optimization? Can it be improved?

But if you really want to try, Try at database level. Try send some traffic to new URL format and check if it working or not first. Well, I never done such testing. It is just my idea.

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@Shakeerah822

Depends. Do external sites link to your URLs? Do people bookmark/favorite your URLs? Are you prepared to permanently set up 301 Redirects to the corresponding new URL? Do you get any kind of traffic from that? How does it convert?

Becuase the ruling factor in your "change URLs" decision should be that organic traffic. That type of traffic is far better qualified than any search result traffic could be. Searchers are tire kicking. Link followers are pre-sold. SEO pays the bull, it doesn't pay the bills. Conversions do that.

To get better SEO at the expense of better traffic is like having an electric car and trading it in for a gas car to reduce your electric bill.

If you just don't get organic traffic, that is, if your traffic is all-search, than this is not a factor.

Also, keyword stuffing URLs is malarkey. It doesn't work, and people only do it because everybody else does it. It's another example of crass, blatant SEO where ranking engineers simply turned the dial to remove its usefulness as soon as it started to affect testing.

I design URLs for the people who are pasting them into customer support emails, forums or tweets... Short enough not to be awkward but rich enough I can tell what the link is when I am pasting it into a customer support email. I.E. not

example.com/product?i=43101415


Obviously there'll be some keywords in there, but that's not the point.

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