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SEO horror stories: Here’s what not to do

There are countless articles about how to improve website rankings. There are but a few about real life, large website SEO Horror stories. The kind of presumed optimization steps taken that make actual experts grind their teeth and Google rankings drop to the bottom. Which is unfortunate, since learning from other people’s failures is much preferred over learning from one’s mistakes. Obviously, few people are inclined, let alone feel comfortable, disclosing any disasters of their own making to the interested public. That’s why the following three real-life cases are completely anonymized. They are textbook examples of how not to approach search engine optimization. All three websites were at the time of disaster primarily focused on non-English speaking markets. They all did reasonably well in Google Search. Furthermore, in all three of these cases poorly informed decisions set in motion a disastrous chain of events. Most recovered after a prolonged time. Lastly, none of the experiences shared below pertain to a past or present client or business partner. 

Site 1: PremiumRetailWebsite

PremiumRetailWebsite, an online store for jewelry, has developed over a few years from a sideshow to the main sales channel, outperforming the brick and mortar showrooms it was supposed to merely support. A few thousand product landing pages in total did reasonably well without much oversight, up until the moment the business decision was made to move from the somehow lengthy domain name to a much shorter, more memorable one. A common enough situation in the online world, yet basic mistakes were made from the beginning. No technical audit was performed and no legacy issues addressed prior to the move . Instead, a crude 1-1 move from the old domain A to a new domain B was planned. With a 301 redirect to the root rule for any outdated, sold-out or discontinued content applied broadly in the process. A migration mishandled like this alone was likely to cause new and magnify legacy problems. When content migration is done, Google has to recrawl new URLs, along with all of their accompanying signals such as backlinks and canonicals, in order to rank what effectively becomes brand new landing pages accordingly. Under any circumstances a migration is best prepared months in advance, carefully planned and executed during a sales low season. In the case of PremiumRetailWebsite all of the points were disregarded, causing as expected an instant drop in Google at the end of Q3. From which the site may have recovered over time, however, the migration was rolled back several weeks later, due to an unexpected legal issue that arose with the new domain B. In desperation an aftermarket domain C was swiftly acquired and the migration once more performed, now to domain C. This unfortunate course of events was further compounded by the fact that domain C past and backlink profile were not checked as part of due diligence. An existing manual penalty aka manual spam action due to Pagerank passing link building turned the SERP slide into a nosedive. The death blow for the site rankings was dealt thereafter when amid the turmoil website operations were restructured to mirror more closely country sales teams. In short succession, PremiumRetailWebsite language versions were upgraded with a multitude of homegrown and customized third party CMS, operated independently on subdomain and directories. Any resemblance of consistency was abandoned, due to internal strife. Too many cooks did spoil the SEO broth at last.

Repeated migrations followed by website management decentralization caused rankings drop.

Learnings: 

Site 2: JourneyCompareHeaven

JourneyCompareHeaven was at the time of events a leading travel aggregator in Central Europe. Operating successfully in a competitive market, the website operators realized the tremendous growth opportunities for the business, if a larger market share could be carved out. On the basis of that premise, thought was given to increasing SERP visibility by growing the volume of landing pages. Expansion plans to neighboring countries and markets were expedited. A modest 500 thousand desirable landing pages were swiftly auto-translated into another five languages. This step alone was sure to cause serious problems, because the content wasn’t localized, which had to impact user satisfaction and by rankings down the line. Content quality considerations aside the truly calamitous decision to open landing page option filtering for indexing was made. Once that happened, the combined approximately 3 million landing pages exploded in SERPs. With non-existent content quality oversight, indexable filtering and no canonicals, the total number of landing pages ever detected could not be exactly gauged. A conservative estimate at the time was about one billion lading pages. Suddenly Google had to crawl and index thousands of landing pages in order to rank even just one. The URL increase alone did not pose an issue for Google, yet with steadily declining quality and user signals, before long crawl budget allocation declined. In consequence, Googlebot began revisiting old URLs as well as detecting new ones progressively less often. In a fast-paced industry, with ever-changing offers, this was of course bound to further reduce relevance for users, consequently worsening users’ signals. A vicious cycle was created. With only scant web server logs temporarily recorded and a recrawl cycle completed only within months, recovery, even though feasible, became a matter of a prolonged uphill battle.

Learnings: 

Rapidly growing landing page volumes do not necessarily improve rankings.

Site 3: MedicineMakesHappy

The last real-life case is merely a classic tale of overreaching. MedicineMakesHappy, a medical services platform with reviews, compelling content and added value such as appointment scheduling services, has successfully managed to maintain their leadership position in a firmly narrow market. With high brand recognition, positive user signals, solid site performance and consistent quality management, the website visibility was good and on an upwards trajectory. A third-party agency took care of ongoing marketing efforts, both on- and off-line. With demand for cosmetic services growing over proportionally, the idea was conceived to address users’ needs and claim leadership in this specific, high revenue niche. In collaboration with the third party agency, an outreach and link building campaign was launched. The backlink profile of several years past wasn’t audited, therefore risk levels remained unknown. An already steadily growing backlink profile now suddenly shot up and kept growing fast. The total volume of backlinks of approximately one million, of which few could be considered merit-based by Google standards, grew in short to over seven million. None of the recently built backlinks were Google Webmaster Guidelines compliant. The ongoing campaign utilized primarily PageRank passing guest blogs with commercial, hard anchor texts. Before long, a manual spam action or Google penalty due to link building was issued. Because of the intensely competitive nature of the market, it is possible that a compelling competitor spam report helped to bring the situation to Google’s attention. Aside from a wide, moderate drop in visibility was followed by a slow rankings decline. Meanwhile, further link building was ongoing, as one after another hastily submitted reconsideration requests were rejected. As the SERP situation deteriorated, the communication with the agency first soured then the collaboration was terminated, without the problem being resolved. Only then was PageRank passing link build discontinued. Over the subsequent two quarters, SERP visibility continued to degenerate with a lingering active manual penalty. During that period new site releases had to be put on hold since its impact could not be accurately measured. Periodic attempts to resolve the penalty using Google Search Console backlink samples failed. Eventually, another third party, specializing in penalty recovery, collected and analyzed historic, as well as fresh backlink data over an extended period of time. The analysis uncovered substantial legacy backlink risks, including long-forgotten directory, press release and prehistoric XRumer backlinks conceived many years back. Ultimately the goal to resolve the manual spam action was met, which helped to stabilize Google visibility somehow, albeit not at a level as high as prior to penalization. That objective was over-achieved several months later when yet untapped site performance potential was uncovered with a technical audit. 

Learnings: 

Sudden PageRank passing backlink growth compounded existing risks and triggered a Google penalty.

Next to the learnings already highlighted, there is another silver lining to these cases. The affected sites all did have a well defined unique selling proposition. They all stood a good chance to recover from their self inflicted SEO hangover, even to improve their organic search performance significantly beyond what was deemed their SERP ceiling in the past. Any legitimate website, even without prior near-catastrophic SEO incidents, has the potential to much improve their signals. Facing imminent disaster, however, increases the pressure to act decisively. Provided that the resources available are concentrated and committed to current best practices, not mere recovery but visibility to the full potential of the website should be the declared goal to strive for.

Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.

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