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Google Penguin Fixes & FAQ

by Jim on May 9, 2012

How To Remove Backlinks

That depends on how you got them. Visit the site where you bought the links from and see if there’s a way to take your links down. If there’s a cost incurred to remove backlinks, wearing it would be a good move to ensure your site doesn’t get hit or so your rankings don’t slide further.

How To Check Links To Your Site

Checking your backlink portfolio is as easy as logging into Google’s free Webmaster Tools service. Under ‘Traffic’ in the sidebar is a ‘Links to Your Site’ link that will show you all the links currently pointing to your site.

Things you should be looking for in the Penguin aftermath include any links coming from a domain containing the words links, SEO or submit in the URL or a lot of links from the same URL that don’t look natural compared to the rest of your backlink portfolio. These links may be from a long lost era but unfortunately, Google remembers everything.

Paid services are also available such as Majestic SEO that can often find more links faster than Google WMT. It’s a premium service at a premium cost however so for most webmasters WMT should be sufficient.

How to Recover Rankings Post-Penguin

One school of thought is that Penguin might not be an actual ‘penalty’ in the same way Google’s Panda content farm update was. With Penguin we’re not seeing as much deindexation from Google, meaning sites that were hit by Penguin are still in Google’s index, but don’t rank anywhere near as well anymore.

It looks like Google is simply degrading the value of these spammy backlinks rather than deindexing pages entirely, meaning a website’s ranking will experience the same ranking drop without the pain of Google’s ban hammer.

The upside (kinda) of this is that there may be a way to get your rankings back on their feet. The key is to avoid the same types of webspam that got your site hit by Google in the first place. Stop looking for ways to build ‘natural looking’ spam links and start actually building natural links. Treat your backlink portfolio the same way you would treat your social media profiles and remember that if you have to think about it too much, it’s probably not a good idea.

Matt Cutts Penguin

Should My Links Be Do Follow?

If your backlinks all have rel=”dofollow” in them then you might be signaling to Google that your links are unnatural and set up for spammy behavior. Simply ensure that the links pointing to your site don’t have rel=”dofollow” tags to be on the safe side with this one.

Why Does Google Webmaster Tools Show the Wrong Rankings?

Many people confuse WMT’s ‘Queries’ section as a tool to see current rankings when in fact it displays averages of your ranking for the time period you set. If yesterday you ranked at number one and today you’re ranking at number 10, you’ll get an averaged position that will most likely be different from your current rankings.

This tool can be helpful in seeing your ranking position in the grand scheme of things but if you’re after tracking and up-to-date take a look at the many different keyword tracking software available on the market such as Web CEO.

But I Got Hit By Penguin Without Even Getting a Webmaster Tools Email. What Gives?

Not everybody got the warning back in March despite our best efforts. We’re not sure what gives but we’ve got a word in with Google for clarification and will update here when they reply.

Can A Competitor Hurt My Rankings By Buying Links to My Site?

Thankfully, no.

In the industry we call this Google Bowling, which was rife in the wild west of Google’s early days. Save your worries however (or your cash if you’re that evil) as Google has come out and said they’ve got that covered.

If we’ve thought about it you’d be crazy to think Google hadn’t. Just take a look at this search integrity meeting Google put out a few months back where the search team debates rolling out very minimal changes in excruciating detail. If Penguin allowed Google Bowling to make a resurgence, Google would never have rolled out the update.

Got any more questions? We’d love to help!

Leave us a comment below or send us an email to AskJim@stewartmedia.com.au if you’d prefer to ask in private!

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QuestionJulian Newman asked on Facebook:

Does Google favor sites that have AdSense Ads?


Answer

The answer is a resounding no. Google’s search rankings are not influenced in any way by their advertising products.

In fact if you start using AdSense a little too heavily on your site, Google will penalise your rankings for not having enough unique content on your page.

Hope that helps Julian!

Got your own question to ask Jim? Shoot away on Facebook, Twitter or by email at askjim@stewartmedia.com.au!

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Ask Jim: When to 301 Redirect

by Jim on November 29, 2011

QuestionMyles Harris asked on Facebook:

When redesigning a site and optimising it for SEO, is changing over poor URL’s like ‘/depnum=812’ to ‘/about’ as simple as 301 redirecting?


 
AnswerThe short answer Myles is yes. All you need to do to change over old poor URL’s like the one mentioned to a more descriptive and meaningful URL is a 301 redirect.

The 301 redirect is a permanent redirect that is used frequently when migrating sites. In addition to pointing users to the correct pages rather than encountering 404 errors, 301 redirects let Google know that content has moved. If your old page was ranking for a phrase and your new page is equally weighted for relevance and authority then it may rank similarly.

301 redirects are an important part of a site rebuild but shouldn’t be used to simply redirect all old pages to a new home page. People searching for your old content may end up on your new page, but you can bet they’ll bounce back to the results page before you can even say 301.

Thanks for the question Myles!

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Ask Jim: Fake Google+ Pages

by Michael on November 17, 2011

Question

Today’s question comes from Josh Rowe on Twitter who asked:

Does Google+ allow parody pages?





Answer

If we’re talking about something similar to the fake profiles you can find anywhere across Twitter then the answer is no.

Google+ Pages’ Additional Terms of Service state:

“Any Google+ user may create a Google+ Page, but only users with authority over the subject matter may administer the Google+ Page.”

That means brand pages created by those without the authority to do so will be dealt with in the following way:

“Violations of Google+ Pages Terms may cause your Google+ account to be suspended or your entire Google account to be terminated, depending on the seriousness of the violation.”

Google+ had its first test yesterday with a fake Bank of America Google+ Page that featured unflattering photos of former-CEO Kenneth Lewis and posts such as “Big company party in foreclosed house #2340087 tonight!”. Google have taken the page down, but no word on whether just the creators Google+ page or their entire Google account was shut down.

Bank of America Fake Google+ Account

Either way, it’s not something we advise risking Josh.

Got a question for Jim?
Send your question to askjim@stewartmedia.com.au or get in touch on Facebook, Twitter or Google+.

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Question

Hi Jim,

If you built a webpage and blocked it from Google bot via robots.txt file and that same landing page was used for an Adwords campaign, does Google still read that page regardless of the disallow instruction in robot.txt?

Is there a separate bot for Adwords and for standard search (SEO)?

I assume Google still has to read the landing page to ascertain keyword quality scores and ensure it meets their guidelines, but just wondered if you knew the definitive answer/process?

Cheers, 
Steve.


Answer

Hi Steve,

If you’ve blocked your site from bots in the robots.txt file, Google’s bots will not be able to read your page for either search or Adwords, which will make your Adwords quality score suffer.

While Google does have separate bots for search and Adwords that can be blocked individually, blocked bots still have the ability to read your URL, which can result in your page still getting indexed by Google.

The best solution for your site is to allow all bots and simply add the noindex meta tag onto the pages you want to block from search. That way, the Adwords bot will still be able to determine your landing page quality, but Google’s search bot will determine that the page is not to be indexed into search results.

To block robots from indexing your page, put the below meta tag into the section of your page.

<meta name="robots" content="noindex">

Hope that helps!

-Jim

Got a question for Jim?
Send your question to askjim@stewartmedia.com.au or get in touch on Facebook, Twitter or Google+.

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