Does redesigning a website affects SEO results
-
We have a website and we are getting good traffic to it. Its a travel related domain registered many years back. Now its ranking high for most of the potential keywords even if it is not at all SEO friendly (Domain is an exact match keyword). We are planning to redesign it. Will that affect the SEO Ranking?
We need to ask some more doubts:
1. When redesigning we are planning to change the inner page URL. So it it wise
to redirect (301) old URL to the new URL? Old url will not be there after redesigning. But its currently having page ranks.
2. Can we redirect more than one old url to a single new page?
3. Google new updates said "they will be going to diminish the exact match results domains". Does that updates affects us?
4. Any more suggestions for the redesigning?
-
I have recent experience with a very similar situation. We decided to go ahead and change the entire look of the site and a lot of the content, but we kept the same URL structure. For one of the main keywords we experienced the following:
Google: We fell from first page to fourth page over a period of 4 months. We are just now starting to see an uptick in rankings and have climbed back to the 3rd page.
Bing: We climbed from the third page to the bottom of the 1st page over a period of 3 months.
Part of the redesign was to focus our on page optimization results.
In answer to your 4 questions:
1. Redirect anything that won't be there for sure. You don't want people clicking an old link just to find a 404 dead site.
2. Yes you can redirect more than one old url to a single new page, but make sure it is a logical redirect and is helpful to the user. Don't just do it for fun.
3. Like Joram said, "You'll have to wait and see"
4. Don't redesign just because you are tired of the look. Too many web site owners look at their website everyday and get tired of the look when it is a perfectly fine site. Have a purpose for redesigning that includes something along the lines of, "This redesign will help my visitors because...."
-
Would it also be important to keep the content similar to maintain SEO and then change it slowly to prevent a drop?
-
My 2 cents:
First of all with any major redesign there will be a lot of changes on the rankings side: those could be positive or negative or a mix of course.
You really need to plan everything with extra care especially if you rank already ...
A good advice is allways to do everthing step by step. That measn: change the design and don't touch the url structure. Change the design but don't inject new pages or delete old ones.
As soon as teh dust is settled with teh design change you can move forward and remove / add new pages and wait again. When everthing is done you can start the redesign of the url structure but again step by step.
In this way you will be able to track and monitor all changes and be able to go back if something bad really happens.
As for the url change - it's a golden rule not to touch those on an existing domain unless it's really really imperative tod o so.
With any url change, even if 301 are implemente correctly you still face a big possibile drop in rankings !
Been there - done that - got burned.
To stay safe, make and bring on the table a contingency plan just in case.
Overview to your questions:
1. When redesigning we are planning to change the inner page URL. So it it wise
to redirect (301) old URL to the new URL? Old url will not be there after redesigning. But its currently having page ranks.
** Even with 301 redirects the site will suffer from the url change. It dosen't mean you don't have to do it but just plan it with care and only if it's really really important to move with the change.
2. Can we redirect more than one old url to a single new page?
** Yes.
3. Google new updates said "they will be going to diminish the exact match results domains". Does that updates affects us?
** Doy ou have an EMD and target the keyword that is in the domain ?
4. Any more suggestions for the redesigning?
** Do everything step by step - build a road map / project plan with the changes- don't dive in live there's no tomorrow as you can run into some serious problems.
Everything can be done and usually a redesign is more then welcomed - especially if it's done from an UX point of view. Do plan however everything with extra care.
-
Hi,
To start with: Yes, your redesign it going to affect your rankings. The question is how it's going to change.
Changing your url structure will definitely have quite an impact on your rankings. It's wise to read some more information about the effect of the url structure on SEO. Maybe this is a good one to start with: http://www.seomoz.org/beginners-guide-to-seo/basics-of-search-engine-friendly-design-and-development
If the old url's won't be accesible any longer you should definitely redirect to the new url's. It is possible to redirect more of your old url's to one new url. After the change in your url structure it might take a while before Google has indexed all your new url's and it's very likely that you'll see a fluctuation in your rankings.
About Google's 'EMD update": You'll have to see over time how that update affects your site.
At least make sure all content is accesible on the new site and don't remove too many internal links to well ranking pages. There are tons of other do's and don't for redesigning your site. I think you can find some very important ones in this SEOmoz guide.
Good luck!
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
International SEO | Question about Hreflang
Hi, I have an International SEO question and would like to get some help from Moz forum: Our company has a Taiwan office for a few years already, but never had any Traditional Chinese (lang code: ZH-TW) webpage publihsed on our site: https://www.abc.com. The regional team recently has built a 50 page ZH-TW microsite based on translations from select pages from abc.com. The site will have it's own navigation. Currently our CMS doesn't have a language directory to support ZH-TW (such as https://www.abc.com/zh-tw) If we do not add a directory, the pages would have to be published as ZH nodes (for Simplified CHINESE) with ZH language tags and canonicals. The only tag we can set for ZH-TW would be the Hreflang tag. Example:
Web Design | | ThinkingPanda0 -
Any risks involved when we have huge list of redirects in our website database?
Hi all, We have changed hundreds and thousands of page and page URLs for last 10 years in our website. So, now we are going to redirect most of the old pages/links to the current related pages. This will increase the number of redirects we set in our website database to thousands. Will this put any extra weight on crawler and any risks involved for employing too many redirects. Thanks
Web Design | | vtmoz0 -
What Website Platform would you use?
We are considering 1 maybe 3 websites (1 new 2 redesign) there are so many options with technology rolling over every 3 years it seems. Here are my obstacles: Wordpress: dynamic but easily hacked, often needs updating Joomla: attractive, but cumbersome to manage Custom: sleek and easier to manage, but gets outdated quickly Here are some variables: 80+ products, E-Commerce, Dynamic, Blog, Tons of images, SEO friendly, MUST not lose our rankings! OK, Moz friends, What do you recommend?
Web Design | | KevnJr0 -
How Progressive Enhancement Will be Helpful for SEO?
We have bundle of webpages where we load the content dynamically with the help of Ajax. Since we, need to implement Ajax crawl scheme for making Google to read those Ajax dynamic content we planned to go with hashbang URL's (!#) by creating HTMl snapshots. But last week Google withdrawn their support on crawling the Ajax crawling scheme we are planning to go with progressive enhancement approach as stated by Google in a press release. So, I just want to know what is meant by progressive enhancement and how we can implement in the case of webpages where we load the content dynamically with the help of Ajax? Please advice me on this.
Web Design | | Prabhu.Sundar1 -
SEO Value to Improving HTML Code of Website That Validates According to W3C?
Greetings MOZ Community: My real estate website www.nyc-officespace-leader.com, originally designed in Drupal, was relaunched using Wordpress in 2013. The code for all URLs validates. The relaunch was performed by developers in Argentina. As part of an SEO campaign, I very reputable design/coding company in the has provided new wire frames to correct useability issues holding back conversions. In the course of the design adjustments they inspected the code and have told me that it is inefficient, that a number of shortcuts were taken and that the code does not conform to Wordpress best practices. What concerns me most is their claim that the quality of coding makes it more difficult for Google to index the site and this may be detrimental to ranking. Is it possible for the original developers to clean up this code if the deficiencies are pointed out to them? Or once coding shortcuts are taken are they impossible to fix? Would it make sense for me to request that the new design team put together a list of HTML deficiencies and provide to the original developers and ask them to correct? I am spending tens of thousands of dollars on content optimization, content marketing. It would be absurd if these coding issues would ultimately prevent improvement in ranking and traffic. At the same time, I hate to be a cynic but the domestic design/coding firm, while being very professional, does have an incentive in getting me to ditch the original design so I commit to an costly rebranding. If these issues are really minor maybe it is not worth making the effort to clean up the code (assuming that is even possible) and focus the budget on content marketing. Any thoughts?
Web Design | | Kingalan10 -
E-Commerce Website Architecture - Cannibalization between Product Categories and Blog Categories?
Hi, I have an e-commerce site that sells laptops. My main landing pages and category pages are as follows:
Web Design | | BeytzNet
"Toshiba Laptops", "Samsung Laptops", etc. We also run a WP blog with industry news.
The posts are divided into categories which are basically as our landing pages.
The posts themselves usually link to the appropriate e-commerce landing page.
For example: a post about a new Samsung Laptop which is categorized in the blog under "Samsung Laptops" will naturally link somewhere inside to the "samsung laptops" ecommerce landing page. Is that good or do the categories on the blog cannibalize my more important e-commerce section landing pages? Thanks0 -
Does meta "Expires" tag affect website cacheing or indexing?
One of our client has a meta expire tag across all pages of their website. Does that tag affect the website overall caching or indexing? Their website pages including home page is crawled every 10 days, however the website is popular high traffic websites, receiving 240,000 visits/month. Please advise what impact this tag will have on the website indexing and caching? Thanks Atomic Team
Web Design | | JamesDixon700 -
How do you visualize website structure
How do you visualize a website structure in terms of (categories of) pages and interlinking. I use such visuals for discussing what you are actually doing now and what can be improved. I have made visuals I few times myself (basically making boxes representing categories of pages and lines representing internal links), but I found that I soon ran into a scheme of huge proportions and needed more paper and more time. Appreciate your thoughts!
Web Design | | NewBuilder2