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LarsenBagley505

: Does changing company/brand name in title have SEO issues? Say we had a website which on every page had a meta title of the following Product Name Blah Blah Blah | CompanyName.com However

@LarsenBagley505

Posted in: #Seo #Title

Say we had a website which on every page had a meta title of the following


Product Name Blah Blah Blah | CompanyName.com


However we felt that "CompanyName.com" was not really our identity and we wanted to change it to be without the ".com" and adding a space in the company name which matched our social media, Google Products and company names.

Could we do one of the following below, and would it hit our SEO rankings if we changed it on all pages immediately?


Product Name Blah Blah Blah | Company Name


Also, would we have to have a space after the pipe and before Company Name, or would the following also work? - That way we save a few more pixels.


Product Name Blah Blah Blah |Company Name

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4 Comments

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@Cody1181609

As previously mentioned, this change should not have that great of an effect on search placement or overall SEO. I would add that the Product you're mentioning in the title tag is the greater influence in search placement and SEO.

It might be worth looking for a URL like (productname.com) and running some tests.

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@Jamie184

The pipe character (|) indicates a semantic cluster. A semantic cluster is a sub-section of text that is to be semantically analyzed by itself. You have two semantic clusters in your example title tag.

While the pipe character is not the only punctuation that indicates a semantic cluster, for example a comma (,) within a sentence, it is treated as an intentional signal and Google has build into it's search engine some value that you can control. The pipe character is not the only character that Google treats as special, the colon character is (:) another with it's own sets of behaviors.

Specifically, your question refers to how Google treats the last segment using a pipe character for branding. In your case, nothing will change. Here is why.

Google is specifically looking for a brand in the last section. If your brand is recognized as a brand within the brand ontology such as Kellogg, Mars, Coke Cola, etc., Google will primarily defer to the ontology. If your brand does not exist in the brand ontology (or even if it does), Google will specifically look at the terms within the brand and the domain name.


examplebrand.com
examplebrand
example brand


Google will look for recognized terms using a variety of methods including n-gram and word boundaries. In my example, both example and brand would be recognized terms and used as very important signals for search. Google also compares what it sees to the domain name. All three examples would signal the domain name so that example brand or examplebrand would equal examplebrand.com. As a result, examplebrand could also be properly matched in search queries against example brand within the title. Potentially, a search for a brand eb could potentially return your brand depending upon the strength of the branding signals as compared to other sites.

As far as the options, all three would mostly work the same, however, much of the strength of how it would work would be dependent upon the terms used. If the terms are too generic, then the strength of the brand can be diluted by other sites. The more specific, the better. For example, craftsman tools. Both are generic terms, however the strength of the terms used as a signal would indicate the brand Craftsman Tools stronger than fresh flowers could. Part of this would be the brand ontology that would signal Craftsman Tools as a brand belonging to Sears. Another part would be that in the search query, fresh flowers has less of specific meaning than craftsman tools which would most often be an intentional search for the brand.

If your brand is not strong, I would recommend example brand contrary to what one would expect. It signals both search term match and the match against the domain name even if it does not appear to be needed. It would work well which ever you chose, however, weak branding signals would become convoluted regardless so why not be clear in how you want your site to be matched against a search query and not rely upon how Google processes things? Also, keep in mind that Bing and Yahoo! exists also.

As for using the pipe character, I recommend that you always put spaces around the pipe for readability. Google will ignore the spaces, however, I highly recommend that you stay traditional and include the spaces anyway.

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@Cugini213

It's the product name that is the main SEO factor on these pages. The change you've suggested should not affect your rankings and it will definitely be better to go ahead with it if it will improve your brand consistency.

The pipe is used as a separator and usually has spaces either side. I would keep it this way rather than removing one of the spaces.

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@Bryan171

such minimal changes will not affect anything. On the other side, i.e. a change of product name will.

Beside of this, you could realize, that Google adds the domain name to titles in the SERP snippet by its own. So after some monitoring and tests you will be able to omit the domain name.

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