Indexwatch The UK s Top 100 SEO Losers of 2018 SISTRIX
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The user signals (return to SERPs) will indicate to Google that something strange is happening here. Unfortunately, this is not the only problem for Parenting.com because the US visibility history shows the same Google algorithm changes. Through our historical data we see that parenting.com went going through a link-related Panda penalty and the link database shows both evidence of ‘cheap’ link building and huge numbers of links from within the Meredith web network and the same IP addresses. Strategies that were working and valid back in 2004 are now risky, and 2018’s algorithm changes are clearly taking action against them. Read more about our thoughts and research on Medic and links.
Indexwatch The UK’ s Top 100 SEO Losers of 2018
From: Steve Paine 24.01.2019In a previous article we shared the top 100 winning domains of 2018. But which domains lost during 2018?ContentsContents1 - Verywell. 99.91% loss - Domain splits.2 - Vevo.com 99.04% loss - Redirects everything to YouTube3 - Myprotein.com 96.2% loss - Big Medic LoserTop 100 losers UK mobile 2018More Medic-related lossesBluewater Affiliate shop ranks well for just 3 months co uk losing brand value UK News Media 2018 Summary 2018 was a turbulent year for Google SERPs. 5 significant updates put the results into a roller-coaster of changes that, in some cases, might be catastrophic for some businesses. In this article we look at the Top 100 losers and analyse some significant domains and sectors. We start with the Top 3.1 – Verywell 99 91% loss – Domain splits
We start with a loss, that could end up as a success story. Verywell has a history that goes all the way back to the late 90’s and a website called about.com. It was huge, a search engine in itself, and it changed hands a number of times over the years. In 2017 the about.com name was changed to Dotdash and 6 informational websites were born. Verywell was one of them. In 2018, the Verywell domain split into 4 health-related websites and it seems that the project has been a relatively good success story. Perhaps it’s unfair to include a migration in the list of losers, but if we step back and look at the history we get an idea of how huge that about.com domain was. The domain verywell.com remains as a landing page for the new business model and of-course, a business-critical redirect engine for over 750,000 incoming links and the 36,900 pages that are still indexed in Google – something we’ll highlight again below.2 – Vevo com 99 04% loss – Redirects everything to YouTube
Clearly this is a business-driven change following the complete re-organisation of Vevo content on YouTube but it’s an interesting study. Vevo videos were providing a lot, if not all, the visibility for vevo.com and now that every single video has been re-directed to YouTube, Vevo has disappeared. Given that Alphabet is a Vevo investor, there’s probably a more important business driver here than SEO. However, despite all the 301 redirects, 433,000 pages, including videos, are still indexed by Google. While they don’t rank well at all, they are an example of a case where 301 redirects don’t have the expected effect. User search activity might still be indicating to Google’s algorithm that Vevo.com should still be indexed for the searches. We wonder how long the Vevo brand will continue to exist, how long those links will stay indexed and what this deal means for the future of YouTube.3 – Myprotein com 96 2% loss – Big Medic Loser
Myprotein.com is the first of a handful of ‘your life‘ websites that were almost wiped-out in the biggest SERPs shake-up we’ve seen in years. It was called ‘Medic’ and consisted of a series of Google search algorithm changes that killed some sites, helped others and gave others a short term gain or loss. A large number, although not all, were related to ‘your money, your life’ content and we’re still analysing the effects, 5 months after it happened. Myprotein got hit badly. We’ve learnt a lot about Medic over the last 5 months and in our most recent publication you’ll see the correlation we found on some domains between previous link-related penalties and the Medic penalties. In analysing any domain that was hit by Medic we now always take a look at the link profile. The link profile of myprotein.com looks good on first-glance. It looks like there have been some direct-ad-sales deals and there are a large percentage of old and low-quality domain backlinks but nothing is really questionable until you look closer at the direct-sell ads. One set of 11,000 links from a huge forum are all indexed as links with a huge array of very specific alt-text. Image placements as advertising should be marked with a nofollow. These aren’t. In addition, the list of top linking domains shows nothing with any Visibility Index which means they are not well-ranked by Google. Some of the domains in the list below are obviously low-quality. myproteindiscountcodes is a clear example.Top 100 losers UK mobile 2018
More Medic-related losses
onhealth.com, a domain that got hit with Panda penalties in 2014, got hit badly again by algorithm updates in 2018. WebMD bought OnHealth in 2002 and their content certainly doesn’t look bad. However, there’s evidence of those poor backlinks again. This time we’re seeing very old links from 2002 which could be evidence of a link-building strategy that, while it might have worked then, doesn’t work now. The third domain in this group of ‘your life’ websites is parenting.com. Owned by Meredith corporation in the USA, the print magazine was ended in 2013. As we write this post, however, the website has also gone. Or has it? Accessing via a USA VPN solves the issue which means that Parenting.com is geo-blocking, possibly to the whole of Europe as a result of the new data protection regulations. parenting.com as viewed from the UKparenting.com as viewed from USA, where they are covering a UK story.Using IP-based geo-targeting like this is always going cause problems with SEO. Google will crawl from USA IP addresses and see different content.The user signals (return to SERPs) will indicate to Google that something strange is happening here. Unfortunately, this is not the only problem for Parenting.com because the US visibility history shows the same Google algorithm changes. Through our historical data we see that parenting.com went going through a link-related Panda penalty and the link database shows both evidence of ‘cheap’ link building and huge numbers of links from within the Meredith web network and the same IP addresses. Strategies that were working and valid back in 2004 are now risky, and 2018’s algorithm changes are clearly taking action against them. Read more about our thoughts and research on Medic and links.