Hey Shawn,
I would use robots.txt to target "rogerbot" to not crawl the specific parameters you're concerned about.
Here are some links that might help you out:
Hope that answers your question! -- Andrew
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Hey Shawn,
I would use robots.txt to target "rogerbot" to not crawl the specific parameters you're concerned about.
Here are some links that might help you out:
Hope that answers your question! -- Andrew
Hey Fuel Interactive --
To answer your specific question, I would use the meta (noindex, follow) tag instead of the canonical. It doesn't pass authority, but it is the correct usage. It will strike the page from ranking consideration, and allow the overall course page to have less competition.
Another question for you: is the article listing page already ranking higher than the overall course page, or is this a worry? If it's a worry, I recommend testing it out first so you don't prematurely optimize. Just a thought.
Hope that helps -- Andrew
Hey Mark,
Here are some additional thoughts on strategy:
Hope that helps.
-- Andrew
Not to mention time-of-implementation. I agree, SEO is very much is a balancing act.
You could embellish the content (add to make it 300 words) to warrant its own page. Then the question is: is it worth my time?
Best of luck!
Hey Tim,
I agree with your strategy.
There should be little reason why the same content would change in ranking. If the text, the internal linking, the # of pages are the same, the url's... the spiders shouldn't be bothered much.
I also think changing a few pages at a time is the strategic thing to do.
--Andrew
Hey cjkimber,
That's actually a common dilemma. Many sites prefer to "meta no-index" your tag pages, to remove those tags from consideration in ranking. That way your primary page (and all others) will rank higher than the tags.
The easy way to do that is to download the Yoast SEO plugin for Wordpress. In the plugin, you can noindex the content by clicking:
SEO (sidebar) > Title & Metas (sidebar) > Taxonomies (tab) > Tags > {Select "noindex, follow"}
There are a lot of other tools that will help you out w/ other parts of your SEO in the plugin.
Does that answer your question?
-- Andrew
Hey Mark_Ch,
One more question--what's your plan with the old URL's? e.g. /green-shoes adn /sports-shoes?
Andrew
No problem, Wayne. Hope that helps.
Nope, but thanks! That was a hypothetical I created. I'm part of an in-house SEO team for an San Diego online printing service. If you have a spare "online printing" link, that's a different story... 
Hey Wayne,
I prefer relevance over proximity much more.
When I think about keywords I want to rank for (e.g. a local dry cleaner), I think "dry cleaning" first (keyword relevance), "Los Angeles" next (local). I would rather Google know that I am a "dry cleaner" than "Los Angeles"; it pins your website higher up for the business type.
-- Andrew
My recommendation is that you give each article its own page and unique link. It may take some doing, but here's why you should:
Article feeds ought to be structured like Wordpress homepages:
Like I said; it's not the 'easy' answer, but it conforms to best SEO practices.
Hope that helps! -- Andrew
@Ronyon - I second the @wesleysmits recommendation to prioritize products with key business value.
To address some of your points:
1. "Do I go with brand by brand? Do I go with products with good margin?".
Here's another tip. Without knowing the big picture, it sounds like you need help w/ just the labor of the thing
IF that's the case, then **make the case to the bean-counters that your work generates profits. If you had more help (hire another SEO), you'd be able to generate profits faster. Then you can also be a manager. **How?
This tip isn't just from me. There's a big tome of a book--The Art of SEO; co-authored by randfish--that spends Chapter 13 talking about "Building an in-house SEO team" (among other things). A great deal of that section talks about why it's so important to get buy-in from the organization.
SEO is a profit center. Management would love to make more money, faster. Give them a few good-looking charts, and get some help!
Hey Matt —
I have a couple of questions:
I doubt that noindexing the posts would help you out—I don't think you're penalized for having pages that are thin on content (they're just less SEO friendly). I would leave them indexed; then also figure out how to beef up your category page design to rank better.
— Andrew
Hey Ronyon --
I just wanted to check that you have the fundamental stuff (low-hanging fruit) taken care of:
From there, you have to figure out where you can build your links from.
Quick question -- what's your approximate budget range? And do you have an existing customer base or are you starting out?
-- Andrew
Hey Primocards,
There are a couple of factors here:
tl;dr; change it if you can, otherwise, don't worry about it. If you just want to improve the usability your Moz reports, just change the keyword you're grading from "men's" to "mens".
@rephael - It will only do a small amount for your home page. Nonetheless, you should do it!
Here is why the impact will be small
There are a couple layers that you should pay attention to:
Page-level
EXAMPLE: www.example.com/products/apples VERSUS www.example.com/products/bananas
IMPACT: The keywords MOST STRONGLY affect the particular page that you are on
WHY: The keywords specify what's on the page you're on. This is the "room" you're in.
Subdomain-level
EXAMPLE: kipjacksnauticalliving.blogspot.com VERSUS blogspot.com (notice how they're very different web sites?)
IMPACT: The keywords LOOSELY affect the particular page you're on
WHY: The subdomain is the site that you're currently in. This is like the "house" you're in. This gives Google clues about what your entire website is about.
**This is what you're asking about in. **
Domain-level
Don't worry about this. It's not really relevant
Here is why you should still do it
Richard --
How about a hybrid solution?:
Benefits
Unless there's another reason that you want this video stored exclusively on your servers, or if you have advanced video playing features that you want to make available to your users, I think YouTube is the way to go.
--Andrew
Hey Moses —
If you wanted to send the ranking history report to another email address, you might want to try to create a "Custom Report" (top right hand corner when you're logged in).
In the last step of the Wizard (step titled "Schedule Report"), you can pick and choose various reports to go into a PDF, which is then emailed to you.
Hope that helps—Andrew
Hey rosswhistler,
There is a filter right above the table, where you can select "Show <all>". You can change <all>to <only follow="">.</only></all></all>
I like to keep a tab on all links (just so I know the scope of my reach), but you're right--I'd focus much harder on the follow links.
— Andrew
Hey Shawn,
I would use robots.txt to target "rogerbot" to not crawl the specific parameters you're concerned about.
Here are some links that might help you out:
Hope that answers your question! -- Andrew
Hey Dan --
I agree with Chiaryn's suggestion to export reports.
Another possibility is to create a different email account/password combination just for Moz—that way your employee gets access to Moz without access to other services.
It's a workaround, but it's how we do it at our shop. We have an email for the SEO group, for the Moz group, etc.
--Andrew
Software currently is the subject of both my work and my hobbies. Sometimes software is useful, but sometimes it is simply fun. The landscape of mobile and web software is constantly changing (thanks to a very productive Silicon Valley), and peoples' habits are constantly adapting around the new services coming out. One of the new offerings that I've been interested in exploring is Google Circles and its promise of dramatically reducing the complexity of your social network. What kinds of neat integrations does that have in your daily communication with the Circles in your life? What kinds of effects does that have on organization and scheduling?