Big Mistakes
Little do you know but you too could be
making mistakes with your website that are costing you your
search engine ranking.
Google and the other search engines are
constantly changing their algorithms to keep pace of search
engine spammers. Some novice website owners may be like me and
be making big mistakes in the eyes of the search engine bots
which will lower their search engine ranking or blot their
website right out of existence from everyone except those
people that have been given their website URL.
Let me tell you my mistakes and what I've
learned from them... In 2000, I started a small research
vineyard. Soon I wanted a website to tell people about it,
advise others how to grow grapes, and get my research
information out to the public.
I was on a shoe-string budge so I learned
HTML myself. My website was quickly posted to one of those
"free" website hosts. Two months later, my website was hitting
the top "5" in the search engine rankings for all of my
keywords. I had lots of relevant content which made this
possible. I was in heaven!
I soon realized that the free web host
didn't provide all that a webmaster wants (cgi-bin, commerce,
etc). I found a better host provider at a reasonable price and
I moved my website.
Big Mistake #1: I didn't remove the pages
from the free website host. I figured with time, that host
would see no activity and just drop me from their server to
make more room for other websites. Little did I know how long
that free website would persist on the Internet.
Big Mistake #2: This one is much like the
first one, just done in a different manner. After three years,
I got tired of my website's appearance. I had learned CSS and
wanted to make my website more uniform and professional
looking. Slowly, I began transitioning my pages to the new
look. Since the search engines knew the old pages, I simply
left them on the backend of my website, while naming the new
pages differently and more google friendly. Little did I know
at the time the search engines would spider both the new and
the old pages now.
I really didn't know that I was doing
anything wrong. When I checked my search engine rankings, I
still ranked very high. I should have paid more attention and
noticed that sometimes it was the new pages that ranked up
there but often it was the old pages. They had been there all
along and still commanded those high search engine rankings.
Once in a while I even saw some of the old pages from the free
web host days.
I guess I was only concerned about my search
engine rankings, not which pages, new or old were being
indexed. After all, as long as my site was getting noticed, and
traffic was coming to my website so why care'
Big Mistake #3: I wanted to put up more
relative content in the form of articles related to growing
grapes and win on my website. I though this would help my
search engine rankings for some keywords I was low in and also
help my website visitors.
I purchased a program named "Article
Equalizer" to make this task easier on myself. Being a new user
of this program, I began to use this software with the
templates that came with the program. It seemed to work well
and produced the results I wanted.
Little did I know that by using the built-in
templates that came with this software, a "finger print" would
be placed in the resulting pages that would identify that I
used this program to generate the index to the article and the
article pages themselves.
Mistake #4: To aggravate the above mistake,
I loaded the index page to the back end of my website. This
index page was a collection of hyperlinks, no content, just
links.
Goggle drastically changed its algorithm
early in the year 2005. The unthinkable happened. Not only did
my search engine rankings drop, they disappeared altogether. I
wasn't even in Google. Google had treated me as a search engine
spammer! I had lost my top rankings and now wasn't even
indexed.
I had violated Google’s new rules. I learn a
lot from my mistakes. What rules did I violate' First, I had
multiple pages of the same content all over the web and my own
website. Google says, "Don't create multiple pages, subdomains,
or domains with substantially duplicate content." Boy, had I
done that. And without even knowing it. I had links up on the
search engines that lead to multiple pages on my own site and
to my old free one.
I had created pages that had multiple links
that lead back to my main page through my article directory
index. I know it looked like I was spamming Google but it was
just a naive mistake, compounded through the software that was
going to save me time.
Naive mistakes can cost you everything when
you're running up against google. My laziness cost me. I didn't
erase what I had created before and had used a program to save
me some time.
I've remedied my mistakes but am yet to be
found in Google. They are unforgiving in that respect but I
believe that I will soon be back in their good graces. Learn
from my mistakes and don't make them. If you have disappeared
from Google, you might want to check and see if you too have
made some naive mistakes like I did. Change your website to
conform to Google's guidelines and then re-submit your site. If
that doesn't work, you'll have to start all over with a new
domain name. And that can be a painful waste of time.
Jim Bruce of Ristvin Marketing helps newbie
internet marketers develop their online businesses through
advice and business software. You can find out more at
http://www.ristvinmarketing.com
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