Thanks for the response. It is nice to hear from someone else who has the same type of site and sees the same thing. Appreciate the tip and the response.
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prima-253509
@prima-253509
Job Title: Director of Marketing
Company: Prima Supply
Website Description
We focus on selling restaurant equipment to startups and established businesses.
I have grown up being fascinated by technology and how it is used in everyday life. My first brush with the internet was less than stellar, I found it hard to use, ugly, and slow. But I stuck around and was excited to see the internet come into its own. I became quite fascinated by the emerging functionality and all of the technology behind it. So pursued an associates in webdesign, and a BA in Liberal studies with a focus on marketing and business. I now work as an in-house SEO analyst and social network strategist.
Favorite Thing about SEO
Learning new things
Latest posts made by prima-253509
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RE: Homepage outranked by sub pages - reason for concern?
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RE: Homepage outranked by sub pages - reason for concern?
Thanks Alan,
that helps and you might have pointed something there. Our site has lots of links on each page and each page basically links to the same pages which would keep everything pretty even. Structure is something that we are working on. I wonder if that is part of the problem.
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Homepage outranked by sub pages - reason for concern?
Hey All,
trying to figure out how concerned I should be about this. So here is the scoop, would appreciate your thoughts.
We have several eCommerce websites that have been affected by Panda, do to content from manufacturers and lack of original content. We have been working hard to write our own descriptions and are seeing an increase in traffic again. We have also been writing blogs since February and are getting a lot of visits to them.
Here is the problem, our blog pages are now outranking our homepage when you type in site:domain-name
Is this a problem? our home page does not show up until you are 3 pages in. However when you type in just our domain name in google as a search it does show up in position one with sitelinks under it.
This is happening across both of our sites. Is this a cause for concern or just natural due to our blogs being more popular than our homepage.
Thanks!
Josh
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RE: How is link juice split between navigation?
Hi Keri,
thanks for the follow up. As for the specific question no I have not really found a concrete answer. Currently we have left the duplicate navigation alone and focused on more pressing updates. Sorry that I don't have more info to share.
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RE: How is link juice split between navigation?
Hey Damien, thanks for the response. Ya I had originally thought about no following one set of links but then found out what you just pointed out, that the nofollow doesn't work that way anymore. We actually have more links then that per page (that just happens to be a round number) but what I am trying to figure out is since about half of them are duplicates am I really losing anything? since they only link to about 50 unique pages are those pages being passed the same amount of juice as they would be if they were only being linked to once per page (instead of being linked to in the main nav and footer)?
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RE: How is link juice split between navigation?
Thanks for posting. I understand what chapter four says but it doesn't seem to answer my question. My understanding is that google only counts the first link on a page when passing link juice although it splits link juice across all of the links on a page. So according to this understanding only the navigation contained in the dropdowns at the top of the page will pass link juice, thus only half of the possible link juice is passed since the links in the footer don't pass any juice (even though they are factored in to how much juice each link passes). Is that a correct understanding? The example in the book does not discuss what happens to how link juice is calculated and passed when two links on one page point to the same subpage.
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How is link juice split between navigation?
Hey All, I am trying to understand link juice as it relates to duplicate navigation
Take for example a site that has a main navigation contained in dropdowns containing 50 links (fully crawl-able and indexable), then in the footer of said page that navigation is repeated so you have a total of 100 links with the same anchor text and url. For simplicity sake will the link juice be divided among those 100 and passed to the corresponding page or does the "1st link rule" still apply and thus only half of the link juice will be passed?
What I am getting at is if there was only one navigation menu and the page was passing 50 link juice units then each of the subpages would get passed 1link juice unit right? but if the menu is duplicated than the possible link juice is divided by 100 so only .5 units are being passed through each link. However because there are two links pointing to the same page is there a net of 1 unit?
We have several sites that do this for UX reasons but I am trying to figure out how badly this could be hurting us in page sculpting and passing juice to our subpages.
Thanks for your help! Cheers.
I have grown up being fascinated by technology and how it is used in everyday life. My first brush with the internet was less than stellar, I found it hard to use, ugly, and slow.
But I stuck around and was excited to see the internet come into its own. I became quite fascinated by the emerging functionality and all of the technology behind it. So pursued an associates in webdesign, and a BA in Liberal studies with a focus on marketing and business.
I now work as an in-house SEO analyst and social network strategist.
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