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  4. Multiple Ecommerce sites, same products

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Multiple Ecommerce sites, same products

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  • AMHC
    AMHC last edited by Dec 23, 2014, 1:54 PM

    We are a large catalog company with thousands of products across 2 different domains. Google clearly knows that the sites are connected. Both domains are fairly well known brands - thousands of branded searches for each site per month. Roughly half of our products overlap - they appear on both sites. We have a known duplicate content issue - both sites having exactly the same product descriptions, and we are working on it.

    We've seen that when a product has different content on the 2 sites, frequently, both pages get to page 2 of the SERPs, but that's as far as it goes, despite aggressive white hat link building tactics.

    1. Is it possible to get the same product pages on page 1 of the SERPs for both sites? (I think I know the answer...)

    2. Should we be canonicalizing (is that a word?) products across the sites? This would get tricky - both sites have roughly the same domain authority, but in different niches. Certain products and keywords naturally rank better on 1 site or the other depending on the niche.

    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
    • AMHC
      AMHC last edited by Dec 29, 2014, 8:45 PM Dec 29, 2014, 8:45 PM

      IMHO, Google has essentially tied our sites together, looking at the rankings and other metrics. We've upgraded some product pages with the same result - the upgraded page and the old page on the other side are stuck on page 2. They even mirror each other in the SERPs. They both move up and down by similar numbers. If Page A drops 2 slots, page B drops 2 slots. It's like the pages are attached at the hip...

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • EGOL
        EGOL last edited by Dec 23, 2014, 4:51 PM Dec 23, 2014, 4:47 PM

        I would do analytics to identify which of these sites performs better in search and then put a big effort into making a massive improvement in content.  This effort would be to make both sites absolutely different from one another and the site that is getting this effort absolutely superior to just about any site that is out there.

        If these sites perform differently in different niches, I would divide the effort being placed into them niche-by-niche.

        I would start with the most profitable niche and focus on the product pages on that site first, then move down on the basis of profit priority.  I would make the best product pages possible, detailing all of the important features and giving tips for use that might stimulate sales.  You are not just beefing up for the search engines, you are beefing up to benefit the customers.

        I would also do an assessment of which products generate the most customer service questions.  For those I would produce informative content that answers those questions in great detail.  This would not be skimpy blog posts.  It would be substantive articles with photos and data that clearly answer the questions.  The goal is to produce a library of this content.  Then customer service people can simply refer people with questions to those pages.  Some people will find those pages on their own and that should reduce the customer service effort.  This should produce great content that will be shared by customers and save you employee time.

        I would also look into products and pages that are unproductive.  These are dead weight on your site and not worth the time needed to improve them.  This is a good time to prune and weed.

        1. Is it possible to get the same product pages on page 1 of the SERPs for both sites?

        Yes, but you will benefit more by getting one page to the top of page one rather than getting two on the bottom of page one.  My goal would be getting one page to rank as high as possible.

        2. Should we be canonicalizing (is that a word?) products across the sites? This would get tricky - both sites have roughly the same domain authority, but in different niches. Certain products and keywords naturally rank better on 1 site or the other depending on the niche.

        The intended use for canonical is to attribute identical content.  My focus on this would be to make massive improvement of  the content of one site.

        If you use canonical attibuting product  ABC to just one site then you will have only one site in the SERPs.

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