Duplicate Content Penalty SEO article updated March 2014 As an SEO expert who loves to use thin affiliate based content I have fallen foul of Google’s duplicate content filters way too many times, have the duplicate content penalty T-Shirt in multiple colours :( If you take anything away from the SEO discussion below, it’s NEVER, EVER, EVER add large amounts of duplicate content to important domains. Thin Affiliate Duplicate Content Over 5 years ago I had a really nice set of Amazon affiliate stores that used Amazon’s XML datafeed, prior to Google cracking down on thin affiliates for duplicate content: basically content created using the affiliates content with no added value, AKA duplicate content or thin affiliate content, my very […]
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A Puzzling Duplicate Content issue
I run a small niche site, the core pages of which are all written by me and are fine. However, in a separate section I also republish Victorian novels on-line, all available to read for free.
My issue is that many of those novels are also published in one or two sites elsewhere. Visitors value these books, indeed the index page for the books is always my highest visited page. But the pages are surely duplicate content, and I am currently suffering a Google penalty.
People from all over the world *want* my pages, but Google slaps me for carrying them. Any thoughts?
A Puzzling Duplicate Content issue
How to Block Duplicate Content
To Saxon:
The index page per se is not duplicated content. So focus on ranking that page.
As for the pages containing the copied texts put them on an internal folder like so: domain.com/novels/novel1.html
Then:
1. Block Google access to novel folder with robots.txt file.
2. Add a meta noindex+nofollow to novel1.html and all novel files.
3. Make all the links on the index nofollow.
That way you should get rid of the penalty and still keep the content for visitors, the novels itself will not appear on Google (you shouldn’t try to rank copied content) but it doesn’t matter cos your index will keep ranking good.
How to Block Duplicate Content
Affiliate Double Content
Hi,
but you forget one huge thing there;
comparison affiliate sites like bizrate, shopzilla,……and so on…..
All these sites have no own original unique content and they rank well in google and make money.
So whey they are not “penalized” by google and making money?
They only show product advertise.
best wishes
marco005
New site with the same old content.
Hi,
I replaced my old site to a new domain after expires my old site. And google indexed my new site after one day. But the next day it is not showing in the index(checked by ‘site:www.alfainads.com’).
My old site: www.alfainad.com
New Site : www.alfainads.com
Please help !!!
Thanks
How to Move Domains SEO Advice
Did you not setup a 301 redirect from the old site to the new for at least a few months to give Google time to know the new site replaces the old?
I’m in the process of deleting a bunch of domains by moving the content here to support the WordPress SEO Package I develop and because the old domains have backlinks I’ll probably have to pay to keep the domains registered for years (current plan 5 years) and redirect the old domains to here.
This ensures Google always passes full SEO benefit from the backlinks from the old domains to here. Will probably just pay for 5 years domain registration for each and forget about it for 5 years, when renewal is due I’ll check if any important backlinks are still live via the old domains, if there are I will have the choice of letting the domains expire and loose the backlinks or pay for more years. My decision will be based on how important the backlinks are.
If your old domain had very few backlinks one year would be more than enough (few months is enough if you can change the backlinks to point to the new domain). The idea is not to loose any important backlinks in a domain move and that means paying for both domains and 301 redirecting old to new.
This assumes your old domain had backlinks.
From the sounds of things you did this.
Made a duplicate copy of the website to the new domain, found Google had indexed it days later.
Deleted the old domain (let it expire) within days of creating the new domain without ever adding any 301 redirects.
What you have is a duplicate copy of your original website without informing Google the duplicate should now be considered the original.
If you are lucky you’ll get away with it, worst case scenario Google sees the new domain as a scraped copy of the old domain and treats it as a duplicate copy.
Solution pay for another year domain registration for the old domain and add a 301 redirect.
This wouldn’t usually happen quickly, so might be something else going on with the new site, though there wasn’t anything obviously wrong (it can be spidered/indexed). Not being sure on the exact timeline could be simply the new domain has no backlinks, Google found the domain not via a backlink, indexed it, but dropped it soon after due to no backlinks and/or duplicate content.
BTW Your site is one of the worst SEO designs I’ve seen in a LONG time! Did the person building it go out of their way to make it anti-SEO?
Not mobile responsive: http://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/insights/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.alfainads.com%2F&tab=mobile
Loads of content in images with either rubbish alt text or SEO spammy alt text. None of the image names are SEO’d.
Spammy meta tags.
All your portfolio links are to images.
Barely any indexable content (only the home page is indexable: there’s only a home page).
Run your home page through: http://tools.seobook.com/general/spider-test/index.php?c=1&url=http://www.alfainads.com/
Note the Text box output, that’s pretty much what Google sees your site as. Look at the big blocks of text “GRAPHICS PACKAGING PRINT GRAPHICS PACKAGING PRINT GRAPHICS PACKAGING…” that looks like keyword stuffing. It’s not keyword stuffing, it’s very poor SEO design!
A combination of keyword stuffing your alt text and meta tags and poor design that makes it look like keyword stuffing your text tripped my SEO SPAM filter, I wouldn’t be shocked if Google is seeing this page as SEO SPAM.
This design is awful, it’s limited your entire online presence to one single webpage (the home page only) and it is so poorly SEO designed you might as well not bother, surely you can’t get business via Google organic search with this design?
Good example of how NOT to build a website for Google organic search engine traffic. I note the designer of the website (they added a comment in the code to their website) appears to have gone out of business (domain no longer registered) I can understand why!
David
How to Move Domains SEO Advice
Move Domain
Hi David,
Thanks for your very detailed reply.
This website was developed by our old web developer, he left our company now. The domain details also not with us,it is in his reseller account, we only have the cpanel details.That is why we changed the domain on the renewal time. We used the same contents and design in the new domain also,but it is after the expiration of the old domain.And this website previously displayed in the front page of google.
Now is there any chance google reindex my site?
Thanks
Move Domain
Regain Lost Google SERPs
I see, sounds like you are sorting out a mess, loosing control of your old domain and fixing the issue by creating a new domain. Valuable lesson, NEVER allow others to own your domain, always register the domain yourself and have access to the domain registration account.
If the old domain remains deleted Google will probably index the new domain after you add some backlinks to it (I assume you haven’t built new backlinks yet?), but you won’t gain your old rankings automatically without the 301 redirects.
With the 301 redirects Google will treat the new domain as deserving whatever rankings the old domain had minus a small downgrade for the redirects.
Without the 301 redirects it’s like me making a copy of your website and placing it on a new domain and hoping I can beat your website rankings just by copying your website. The only plus you have is the old domain is delete (so only one copy online), BUT this only helps if your SERPs are SUPER easy.
If you consider a good SERP “Alfain Advertising & Publishing” you’ll probably regain it easy, but if you had even semi-competitive SERPs like “Advertising Agencies in Dubai” and “Advertising Agencies in Sharjah” (I’m guessing you didn’t have those SERPs with the old site, your SEO is really bad) you will be competing with competition who have been online longer than your new domain and have backlinks.
Basically you just shot yourself in the face deleting your old domain without adding 301 redirects. Saying that I’d be surprised if the old domain generated 50 visitors a month from organic search, so not lost a lot (unless you can make a living from so little traffic).
The fix is gain control over the old domain and pay for another year domain registration and 301 redirect (or use the old domain even better fix). If you have lost control of the old domain it’s a case of fingers crossed and rebuild like you would with a new website.
Your current SEO is rubbish and doesn’t look like you have a backlink profile (backlinks are important), so if this was easy SERPs you had (company name type SERPs like “Alfain Advertising & Publishing”) with a better SEO design and working on backlinks you should easily regain the SERPs.
Search Google for Alfain Advertising & Publishing and you are at number 1 today. You should signup for Google Webmaster Tools and check the index status there, will be 100% accurate what is and isn’t indexed and if Google does hit the site with a penalty you sometimes get a warning via Webmaster Tools.
Good luck.
David
Regain Lost Google SERPs