Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Google didn't like the new site (perhaps a filter)?
There is a site that is about 3 months old
. This site is a catalog of certain services with affiliate links to companies that provide these services.
And also on the site there are pages with reviews about these companies.
The texts on the testimonials pages are original. And everything is ok with them, they went to the TOP and Yandex, and some begin to go already to the TOP of Google
. And the catalog pages are far from original texts, because there are already similar directory sites that describe the same services from the same companies.
AI in Yandex catalog pages go to the TOPs is not bad for a new site. There is already a small amount of traffic going on.
And in Google, these pages for competitive queries are for the most part not even in the top 100. When entering original queries of 4 words - are.
I promoted a very similar custom project last year, also from scratch, and then Google was MUCH faster to respond to the site. With about the same link promotion
, I suspect that Google did not like that the catalog pages were too unoriginal. And knowing Google, if I get tired and make the pages much more original, if he doesn’t love them anymore, he won’t love them either. But they probably don't have any direct filters. Am I understanding this correctly?
And I think it's worth making these pages very original, but changing their url. And since some of the links to these pages are already hanging, make page-by-page redirects, from old pages to new ones. It seems that redirects should not bring harm in this case (because there is probably no direct filter on the pages) What do you think?
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
I think you need to look at the webmaster
. If you change urls, then without redirects, otherwise they will be old pages and there is no point
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question