: Rankings dropping after small URL-change WITH 301-redirect Two weeks ago, we attempted to make the URLs of ca. 12 pages more search-engine friendly. We changed three things. 1. Make URLs more
Two weeks ago, we attempted to make the URLs of ca. 12 pages more search-engine friendly. We changed three things.
1. Make URLs more SEF
from: /แอร์-ราคา/brandname.html (meaning: /aircon-price/daikin.html
to: /แอร์-brandnameinenglish-brandnameinthai.html
We set up 301-redirects from the old to the new URLs. You can find an example and the link to our page here: bit.ly/XRoTOK There are no direct external links to the old URLs.
2. Added text to img-links from homepage to brand-pages
Before those changes, we only linked to those brands with a picture, so we added some text under the picture. You can see that here, in the left submenu: bit.ly/XRpfoF
3. Minor changes to Title, h1-Tags, Meta Description, etc.
Only minor changes, to better match the on-site optimization with targeted keywords. For example, before we used full brand names, after we used what was really searched for:
from: Mitsubishi Electric Mr. Slim
to: แอร์ Mitsubishi (means: Aircon Mitsubishi)
Three days after these changes, we noticed a heavy drop (80% loss in non-paid search traffic) in rankings and traffic for those pages, and also for all pages which are sub-categorized. Rankings for all keywords not affected by the changes stayed the same.
Any ideas, what happened, and how we can regain our old rankings? We have already submitted a new sitemap.
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Well these are minor changes as compared to migrating from a old to new domain name. Google does have a set of rules to support that transition
Make URLs more SEF
I believe what has happened is that Googlebot thinks that the site has duplicate content which receives negative points. As the old and new links point to almost similar content Googlebot thinks finds a sudden increase in duplicate content. Well first off, it would be great if you could revert your changes and then gradually apply 301 redirects to sets of pages. But I doubt this is possible.
301 redirects are not bad and are actually encourage by Google.
My best bet is that you would need to tell Googlebot your preferred domain when it comes across such redirects. You do this by redirecting users to the preferred domain using permanent 301 redirects and emphasizing the new page is THE canonical page by setting the rel="canonical" attribute.
You may want to have a look at this link - handling cross-domain content duplication as it is similar to your issue.
Added text to img-links from homepage to brand-pages
This again is a minor change. Webcrawlers would this page as a possible duplicate.
Minor changes to Title, h1-Tags, Meta Description, etc.
Well Google for one ignore all Meta tags.
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