Should I issue a change of address for my demo site which has been indexed?
-
The web design company tasked with building a company website have a demo site which reflects the live site - as the site is constantly being developed and needs to be tested by numerous uses, removing the demo site is not an option.
The demo site is a subdomain of the live site: demo.mysite.com
The demo site has been indexed by Google as the web design company didn't add a robots.txt file disallowing all. The demo site was indexed 3 years before I started working at the company.
My first action was to add a robots.txt file disallowing all, I then added a noindex and nofollow meta tag into the header of all files on the demo area - this has prevented any new pages from being indexed but the original pages of the site are still in Google index.
Do you think I should add the demo subdomain (demo.mysite.com) into Google Webmaster and issue a change of address pointing to the actual website (www.mysite.com) or is this going to cause problems?
All thoughts, opinions and recommendations are very much appreciated.
-
Hi Paul,
Some great advice.
In the turn of the New Year when we have more resources we are going to take action following your plan - it is a lot more work but makes perfect sense.
Again, thank you for pointing out that I need to remove the robots.txt block so that the page commands can be discovered - I will get onto this straight away.
Thank you once again.
Lloyd
-
You've got a couple of issues here, Lloyd, that aren't going to be solved by your proposed solution. The biggest one is - after three years, you have a huge amount of dev site pages indexed, and it is quite likely those pages now have at least some incoming links. If you just de-index those pages, that link and indexing equity will be thrown away, and users will continue to arrive on the "wrong" pages for quite some time.
In my experience, to do this correctly, you've got a bit more work ahead of you.
- Move the dev site to a new subdomain.
- As soon as it's moved, add a met-robots declaration to the dev site's htaccess file to automatically add no-index/no-follow to the headers of every page. If you wish, at this point, you can also add a block in robots.txt.
- Optionally, (and most preferably) password-protect the dev site by setting up a password in htaccess, assuming there aren't a huge number of people who need to have dev site access.
- 301-redirect all the existing (old) dev site's pages to the equivalent pages on the main Domain. This can be done with a single rewrite rule in htaccess.
- Removing the robots.txt block from the current dev subdomain would also be a good idea.
- Submit the main section pages of the Dev site using the Fetch as Google/Bing bot tools in the respective Webmaster Tools to try to speed up the discovery of the 301 redirects. This should help get the redirects crawled and indexed sooner, and therefore hopefully drop out of the index a bit quicker.
The main reason for doing it this way is to preserve all the link/indexing equity that has built up over the three years. In addition, it ensures any incoming dev links or users with bookmarked links will immediately end up on the correct pages. Remember, a notice to users on the dev domain page will mean the user will have to figure out how to find the correct page on the "real" domain - not a user experience you want to inflict on your customer. By using the above solution, they can't get to the "wrong" pages in the first place.
Does that all makes sense? More work, but for a much cleaner solution, both for the user and for the search engines.
Oh, and if you decide to go the easy way and leave the current dev site in place as no-indexed, you're going to have to remove the robots.txt block. No-index and robots.txt block CANNOT be used together if the pages are already indexed. The robots block tells the search engines not to crawl the pages, which means they can never the discover the no-index commands and so will never drop the pages from the index. (That's why your existing pages haven't dropped out.)
Lemme know what you think;
Paul
-
Great, thank you for your advice Jeff.
From past experiences, how long does it usually take for Google to de-index pages that have the noindex and nofollow tag in the header?
-
Llyod-
I wouldn't recommend the change of address feature. It's meant to be used when you are migrating your main website to a new domain. Your primary (live) domain is intact; you just want to no-index / no-follow your demo site.
The change of address will also only be effective for 180 days, too.
Google recently changed their change of address tool, and Barry Schwartz of Search Engine Land walks through it:
http://searchengineland.com/google-revamps-change-address-tool-within-webmaster-tools-205829The big takeaway:
"Don't use this tool unless you are moving your primary website presence to a new address."I hope this helps!
-- Jeff -
Hi Jeff,
Sorry for taking so long to reply and thank you for taking the time to respond.
1. It isn't possible to password protect the demo sites for numerous.
2. The demo and live site are hosted using a load server which has multiple IP addresses, all of which change from week-to-week meaning that we cant restrict the IP addresses using the htaccess file.
3. I like the idea of adding a banner to the top of the demo site letting people know that they are not on the live site, we could also include a link through to the live site - which help usability.
Can I ask why you don't think I should issue a change of address?
Thanks,
Lloyd
-
This happens a lot more than you might imagine. We've even seen times where end users are placing orders on test sites because they're able to find out-of-stock items from an out-of-date demo site.
If you need to have the demo. store up and running so people can test it, I don't think you need to tell Google about the change of address. I think that the no-index / no-follow status of the site and the robots.txt should prevent Google from indexing it.
That said, there are a few more ways to protect the demo site:
1. You can password protect it, using an .htaccess file. This might not be ideal, because testing might prevent you from being able to see the whole site properly on different devices.
2. You could IP restrict the site to a small number if IP addresses, using your .htaccess file. In this way, only people who are whitelisted are able to do this. You could even get fancier, and have a form that allows testers to be able to add their IP address to the "allowed" list from a browser. Anyone else would / could be redirected to the normal site.
3. I'd also recommend putting a banner at the top of the demo site, letting people know that any orders placed there are just for testing and won't be fulfilled.
I hope this helps!
-- Jeff
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
-
Can you check my Quran site and its technical issues?
Hi, Hope you are doing good, I saw many Quran websites working fine. I have a blog that has online Quran classes of Arabic and Tajweed related courses as well. Can you please check that if all is okay in terms of technical issues? Here is the website: https://learnquran.academy
SEO Learn Center | | ShirleyLemons0 -
Backlink From Different Language Sites Will Spoil My Ranking?
Hi there! Excited to joining this community. The main question is that if I get backlinks from different language sites then that backlink will be worthy or non-worthy in the eye of search engine? I know if I target international market by presenting my content in different languages then of course it will be worthwhile for me. But what will be happened if I do not represent content in different languages on my site but get the backlines from other language sites such as: Chinese, Russian or any other? Also I have seen many sites which are getting backlinks from different language sites and they are just getting high authority. Is there any expert?
SEO Learn Center | | mianarfan3331 -
SSL for the entire site?
Hej, I wonder if anyone can recommend to make the entire site using SSL? Are there any negative aspects to make a whole site SSL encrypted?
SEO Learn Center | | bastelele
I'm using the Wordpress CMS and for the moment I've limited the SSL for the contact forms. Thanks in advance
Bastian0 -
My Wordpress Organic Blog traffic disappeared and Google is indexing Viagra and Online Med titles for some articles. How to fix that?
Hello, I'm worried that all my organic traffic has disappeared according to Analytics from past friday and now Google is showing results from my title tags in the last days as you can see here: http://goo.gl/QFSgy Is there any additional resources I can read apart from Google Clean Your site Guidelines here https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/163634 or the Wordpress FAQ for hacked sites here? http://codex.wordpress.org/FAQ_My_site_was_hacked Very much appreciated all of your help! Regards.
SEO Learn Center | | viventuraSEO0 -
Site for my clients to log in and see their traffic, etc.
I have done a ton of research and I am struggling to find an easy to use, easy to understand site / tool that will allow my clients to log in and see basic information about their website traffic, rankings, referring sites, etc. in an ATTRACTIVE, EASY TO UNDERSTAND layout. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated! Seomoz (my true favorite) Raven, webceo, and so many others are powerful tools - I don't need that, just looking for an attractive place to log in and view their stats, that's it. Thank you - have a great rest of the week! Matthew
SEO Learn Center | | Mrupp440 -
SEO Ads On Third Party Job Sites?
Hello all, I seriously doubt I will get a reply to this as I'm guessing no one has experience with it. if you do though then I would appreciate any information either via comment or PM. Basically, I need to know how I can improve the rankings of job posts within the third party sites. An example would be totaljobs.com, how can I improve the rankings of advertisements that are posted there or is it simply ranked by date and location?. When I had my eBay business, I did a lot of research on eBay SEO and discovered some important factors for ranking within the eBay website. I'm basically wanting to do the same here on job board websites for job ads posted to them. Their algorithms won't be as advanced as Google etc so I'm guessing if they do they will be open for higher keyword density levels and that kind of thing.. I've googled it quite a bit and can't find any information at all on it. Thanks.
SEO Learn Center | | LukeHutchinson0 -
Multilingual site (rel="alternate" hreflang="x")
Hi there, We have a multilingual site with same content translated into different languages. Some are also in different countries with same language. The issue with our site is that international Google SERP shows our US site before their own country/language site. In order to resolve this issue, we implemented the following rel="alternate" hreflang="x" across all locales: After testing these out, our US site still shows up on search results in other countries (checked after 2 months). Are we missing something here? Our guess is that it's not working because we are missing canonical tags or meta language code (). Thanks in advance.
SEO Learn Center | | hjoeng-010 -
Subdomain Structure vs Top Level Domain Site; An Actual Case
A major non-profit with 360 locations just completed a new program. The non-profit has updated its site at URL www.mysite.com. Each of the 360 locations has a subdomain site with URL http://mylocation.mysite.com which reflects the branding of www.mysite.com and has a Drupal content management system. The company is asking each location to transition the top level domain of each location ( example www.mysite.com to http://mylocation.mysite.com). The subdomain location sites are tied to a CRM system, which initially hasn't worked. But the long term objective is to gather CRM data via the subdomain location sites. The main site has an Alexa Global Rank of 30,400 and a US Rank of 7900. The main site has 2600 backlinks, and is a pretty powerful site. Some individual locations in large metropolitan areas have decent backlinks, but most don't. The PR of most local sites is 3 to 6. The SEO experts at www.mysite.com have maintained that the power and authority of the main site www.mysite.com would propel the local rank of each location to a position of high visibility. Using Market Samuari and Majestic SEO, a test on each of the 360 location subdomains was performed. It was determined that Page Rank did pass from the main site to the local site in 15% of the cases. However, 85% of the subdomain sites had 0 Page Rank. Page Rank did vary from 2 to 5 on the 15% that passed rank, but there was no cross checking to see if the subdomain location had the same page rank as the locations top level domain. Referring Domains Domain (RDD) was usually -1; Referring Domains Page (RDP) was usually 0; Page Backlinks (BLP) was usually 0; Back Links to Domain (BLD) was usually 0; Google Cache age was all over the map from unknown to 58 days. Questions: Anyone suspect why some sites pass Page Rank and others don't; Should we continue on the path towards using the subdomain sites, or should each location keep its top level site and work on improving their local search visibility there? There is no way to check Google Analytics (GA) on the subdomain sites without having to access GA on the main site www.mysite.com. Right? Will Google Places and Bing Local honor the subdomain URLs for their respective Local Search pages. Would there be a compelling reason or reasons to abandon the subdomain sites? Thanks much for your comments!!
SEO Learn Center | | VernonWanner0