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    Panda, rankings and other non-sense issues

    Intermediate & Advanced SEO
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    • fablau
      fablau last edited by

      Hello everyone

      I have a problem here. My website has been hit by Panda several times in the past, the first time back in 2011 (first Panda ever) and then another couple of times since then, and, lastly, the last June 2016 (either Panda or Phantom, not clear yet). In other words, it looks like my website is very prone to "quality" updates by big G:

      http://www.virtualsheetmusic.com/

      Still trying to understand how to get rid of Panda related issues once for all after so many years of tweaking and cleaning my website of possible duplicate or thin content (301 redirects, noindexed pages, canonicals, etc), and I have tried everything, believe me. You name it. We recovered several times though, but once in a while, we are still hit by that damn animal. It really looks like we are in the so called "grey" area of Panda, where we are "randomly" hit by it once in a while.

      Interestingly enough, some of our competitors live joyful lives, at the top of the rankings, without caring at all about Panda and such, and I can't really make a sense of it.

      Take for example this competitors of ours:

      http://8notes.com

      They have a much smaller catalog than ours, worse quality of offered music, thousands of duplicate pages, ads everywhere, and yet... they are able to rank 1st on the 1st page of Google for most of our keywords. And for most, I mean, 99.99% of them.

      Take for example "violin sheet music", "piano sheet music", "classical sheet music", "free sheet music", etc... they are always first.

      As I said, they have a much smaller website than ours, with a much smaller offering than ours, their content quality is questionable (not cured by professional musicians, and highly sloppy done content as well as design), and yet they have over 480,000 pages indexed on Google, mostly duplicate pages. They don't care about canonicals to avoid duplicate content, 301s, noindex, robot tags, etc, nor to add text or user reviews to avoid "thin content" penalties... they really don't care about anything of that, and yet, they rank 1st.

      So... to all the experts out there, my question is: Why's that? What's the sense or the logic beyond that? And please, don't tell me they have a stronger domain authority, linking root domains, etc. because according to the duplicate and thin issues I see on that site, nothing can justify their positions in my opinion and, mostly, I can't find a reason why we instead are so much penalized by Panda and such kind of "quality" updates when they are released, whereas websites like that one (8notes.com) rank 1st making fun of all the mighty Panda all year around.

      Thoughts???!!!

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • julie-getonthemap
        julie-getonthemap last edited by

        I feel bad for you. I don't have any answers, but I'm a singer, and your website is excellent. This is not an example of Google rewards quality.

        fablau 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • DonnaDuncan
          DonnaDuncan last edited by

          This post is deleted!
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          • fablau
            fablau @julie-getonthemap last edited by

            Thank you Julie, appreciated!! I really don't understand why most of the times our website content is buried in the search results, whereas "crappy" websites are shown prominently before us... do you call that "quality" big G??!!

            Thank you again for your kind words 🙂

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • DonnaDuncan
              DonnaDuncan last edited by

              The only thing I can think to suggest is to look at how much inbound search traffic you are receiving on your category pages (e.g. genres, instruments, skill levels, exclusive, specials, etc.) to assess whether any of those could be noindexed. I understand why you'd want them indexed, but if they're causing you to not rank at all, then you might have to balance that out.

              fablau 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • fablau
                fablau @DonnaDuncan last edited by

                Thank you Donna for your reply, but that's exactly why I posted my concerns here: How do I know if a page or a set of pages are "causing" me to not rank? That's the purpose of this discussion... how do I actually know that any action of that kind, by "nuking" pages, will be causing me more benefit than damage?

                A couple of years ago, I thought to be under a Panda penalty, and I started to remove from the index many of our product pages that I thought were not bringing us traffic or had low user engagement... well,  the only result we had was a steady decline of traffic because of the removed pages, that's all. I put all pages back after 6 months because we would have died miserably. After 6 months I concluded that we were NOT under a Panda penalty. IN fact, I put back all pages, traffic got back and we started to rank better than before (fortunate event??)

                Also, if I we are under a Panda or similar penalty, why do we still rank well for some keywords? And, back again to square one: Why should we think to be under a Panda penalization if our content is actually less thin, less duplicate, and better handled with canonicals, noindex tages, etc, in order to cope with any possible Panda penalty than our well-ranked competitors??!

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • Guest
                  Guest last edited by

                  This post is deleted!
                  fablau 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • fablau
                    fablau @Guest last edited by

                    Thank you Kristen for your kind reply.

                    Yes, of course, I have considered that a thousand times. Do you really think that could cause so much trouble to make most of our rankings slip over the 10th or 20th page of the SERPS? Those pages you have mentioned on our website, are actually blocked by robots.txt, with the exception of the first page of course. My concern is about those first pages that should be able to rank anyway... unless you tell me that the contextual weight of the "subsequent" pages could play a role to "boost" the first page in some way if Google can spider and index them... but then, I'd be concerned with "too much similar or thin content" because by doing what our competitors are doing, I'd create thousands of additional pages with inside pretty much the same content (lists) organized in different ways... you see what I mean? Of course it seems to work for our competitor, but hence the contradiction and absurdity I was talking about above with the Panda algorithm: shouldn't all those thousands of extra and similar pages be bamboo for Panda?

                    I hope to have not confused you... I am just trying to find the elephant here that is causing the problem...

                    Thank you for your help!

                    Guest 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • Guest
                      Guest @fablau last edited by

                      This post is deleted!
                      fablau 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                      • fablau
                        fablau @Guest last edited by

                        This is a very good answer, thank you Kristen. The more I look at the "site structure" of my competitor compared to ours, the more I realize we need to work on that.

                        I have also started to think about the so called "siloing technique" Bruce Clay introduced a few years ago, and it looks like 8notes.com has done a very good job to follow that kind of concept, whereas we are probably "spreading" too much of our juice around thousands of different pages and categories... what are your thoughts on that?

                        Just a thought about the fact I have put those pages to be no indexed in the robots.txt file: If you look at those pages, you see they are generated dynamically from our internal search engine. And as you can see, you can filter results by clicking the filters on the left side of the page... which is a great thing for users, but can be problematic for search engines. Right? So.. that's why I decided to simply no-robot those pages, to avoid any possible indexing and crawling issues. So... how would you suggest tackling that problem? My first idea would be to create "static pages" for those dynamic pages linked from the category pages, and then block via no-robot the links of the filters on the left side... do you have any different ideas?

                        Thank you again for your help! Super-appreciated!

                        Guest 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • fablau
                          fablau last edited by

                          In any case, I created this thread to discuss about Panda and its "possible" and "not-possible" implications... so, the discussion is still be open.

                          In the meantime I wait with hope for an answer to my questions above from Kristen (thank you again Kristen!), I'd like to get back to the topic: Panda. It is clear to me that my situation could be improved as Kristen has suggested above, but it is also clear that if so, that's nothing to do with Panda, isn't it? That's just about "content consolidation" and "topical relevance".

                          Then, back to my original discussion topic, what about the classical Panda issues such as "thin content", or "duplicate content"? As I wrote above, my competitor has plenty of that kind of content, but doesn't seem to have been touched by Panda whatsoever. So... what's the deal with Panda then? And in my particular niche, should I worry more about "topical relevance" and keep optimizing my site under other aspects (usability, user intent, etc), and stop worrying to much about thin and duplicate content?

                          If you were me, what would you do considering my competitor's evidence? How many other site owners like myself have become "paranoid" about Panda (wasting tons of time, resources and money) and have instead lost focus on other (probably more important!) issues such as topical relevance, content organization, usability, user intent, etc.

                          More thoughts on that?

                          DonnaDuncan 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • DonnaDuncan
                            DonnaDuncan @fablau last edited by

                            You're right. Your site and 8notes seem to be guilty of the same practices, assuming there's anything wrong with them, and yet it is ranking well. Although according to MajesticSEO, it has half the pages you have indexed (520,439 vs 944,432).

                            Your link profiles are significantly different. Again according to Majestic, you have way more backlinks (649,076 vs 234,122) but from half as many referring domains, IPs and subnets. You have 1/10th of the educational backlinks of 8notes. And the majority of your backlinks, roughly 55%, are nofollow whereas 90% of 8notes are the opposite (follow). 8notes seems to have more deep links as well.

                            Maybe it's worth looking a little more closely at your link profile?

                            8notes is also https. That might also have a bearing given you're both ecommerce.

                            fablau 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • fablau
                              fablau @DonnaDuncan last edited by

                              Thank you Donna! Yes, I am aware of our different back link profile. We are a commercial website, therefore we have many backlinks from hundreds of affiliates... and that could cause issues, I am aware of that. I have worked a lot with my affiliate to put nofollow links where necessary, and to not pass page rank as much as possible...  But again, we are talking about issues NOT Panda related... right?

                              So... again, this can't explain why the first Panda in 2011 as well as the last quality update released in June (was that really Panda?) has hit us hard. I am getting convinced that it is not Panda the beast hitting us once in a while, but something else... my point is: I could be under "several" penalties, ok, I get that... I could be under some Panda penalization, or other quality penalization, and maybe Penguin to some extent (I could never find a clear relation between my traffic loss and the release of Penguin updates though)... but if I am really in the eye of Panda when that happen, back to my original question, why my competitor has never been touched by the white & black bear when its content should be much more prone to Panda than mine? That's the whole point of my conversation here and the answer I am trying to find. I am trying to find a logical explanation of why my traffic dropped with the release of Panda updates, whereas my competitor wasn't touched at all.

                              Thank you again for your help, appreciated!

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • Guest
                                Guest @fablau last edited by

                                This post is deleted!
                                fablau 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • fablau
                                  fablau @Guest last edited by

                                  Thank you Kristen,

                                  I have just put down a plan to re-architect our website that way and create "sub-categories" in the same way our competitor has done to push-up the main category pages as well (according to the "soloing" technique).

                                  As I wrote yesterday below, this is also something clearly NOT related to Panda... just another needed tweak to the site.

                                  Thank you again, appreciated your help!

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • julie-getonthemap
                                    julie-getonthemap last edited by

                                    I think it's like the Highway Patrol.

                                    Everyone speeds, but everyone doesn't get caught.  You point to a similar web page that hasn't been penalized, but there are many who have.

                                    fablau 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                    • fablau
                                      fablau @julie-getonthemap last edited by

                                      Thank you Julie for your posting and for participating in this discussion.

                                      Well, what you say might be true, but being an algorithmic penalization that shouldn't really happen... unless the system is flawed in some way to catch the wrong guys (every time?)

                                      Also, thin and duplicate content is so much more obvious and noticeable on our competitors that makes me completely mad trying to find a logical explanation of why me and not them!

                                      Unless, Panda or other similar "quality" updates are looking now for something else nobody has clearly understood yet...

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • fablau
                                        fablau @DonnaDuncan last edited by

                                        Donna, as a side note, I have no idea where Majestic pulled out over 944,000 indexed pages for our website. By spidering it with Screaming Frog we couldn't crawl more than 387,726 pages... unless they crawled all links dynamically generated by our internal search engine, which by the way, is blocked by the robots.txt file, therefore all those dynamic pages should be not counted.

                                        Also, on the actual Google index, if you use the site: command, you'll see that Google has indexed just 123,000 pages from our site (because most of them are canonicalized), whereas you'll see over 545,000 for 8notes.com.

                                        Actual data seems to be a little different...

                                        DonnaDuncan 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • DonnaDuncan
                                          DonnaDuncan @fablau last edited by

                                          I wonder if "indexed URLs" is an accurate label. I looked at the URLs Majestic found, and a significant number are redirected files, images, and mp3s.

                                          You have a perplexing problem Fabrizo...

                                          fablau 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • fablau
                                            fablau @DonnaDuncan last edited by

                                            Yes, I agree with you, I don't see much logic beyond that. Of course, if they also count images, we have hundreds of thousands... we are a pretty big website, what do you expect, right?

                                            My website situation makes people "scratch their heads", all the time...

                                            I'd really like to know from you if you see anything on my website that could trigger a "Panda" kind of of penalization, compared to my mentioned competitor above (8nots.com). So far, no one on this thread has given me any hints on that.

                                            Thank you again for your insights, I appreciated it very much.

                                            DonnaDuncan 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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