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Friday, September 28, 2012

Removed From Google Index Why

1. Google Statement

"Your page was manually removed from our index, because it did not conform with the quality standards necessary to assign accurate PageRank. We will not comment on the individual reasons a page was removed and we do not offer an exhaustive list of practices that can cause removal. However, certain actions such as cloaking, writing text that can be seen by search engines but not by users, or setting up pages/links with the sole purpose of fooling search engines may result in permanent removal from our index. If you think your site may fall into this category, you might try 'cleaning up' the page and sending a re-inclusion request to We do not make any guarantees about if or when we will re-include your site."

SO : Firs of all No one other than Google could tell you precisely why your site was removed. And Google doesn't do that sort of thing. The best that can be had is an analysis yielding red flags that could lead to your site's removal.

2. No seo can guarantee inclusion in Google after he/she analyze the site.

3. The search engines are not terribly specific about the practices that are considered to be SE spam, however, Google offers a short list:

Avoid hidden text or hidden links.

Don't employ cloaking or sneaky redirects.

Don't send automated queries to Google.

Don't load pages with irrelevant words.

Don't create multiple pages, subdomains, or domains with substantially duplicate content.

Avoid "doorway" pages created just for search engines, or other "cookie cutter" approaches such as affiliate programs with little or no original content

Most of "the rest" is covered by:

"Avoid tricks intended to improve search engine rankings. A good rule of thumb is whether you'd feel comfortable explaining what you've done to a website that competes with you. Another useful test is to ask, "Does this help my users? Would I do this if search engines didn't exist?""

"Don't participate in link schemes designed to increase your site's ranking or PageRank. In particular, avoid links to web spammers or "bad neighborhoods" on the web as your own ranking may be affected adversely by those links."

"Google may respond negatively to other misleading practices not listed here, (e.g. tricking users by registering misspellings of well-known web sites). It's not safe to assume that just because a specific deceptive technique isn't included on this page, Google approves of it."

Webmaster Guidelines | Quality

/webmasters/guidelines.html

Yahoo Search is even more restrictive in their definitions of spam and undesirables, however, concentration on detection and removal has not been receiving quite as much focus. It would be an excellent idea to be aware of and conform to Y's restrictions, since Yahoo has no reacceptance policy. Banishment has been, in every case I've heard of, permanent. [/help/us/ysearch/deletions/deletions-05.html]

4. Crosslinking / Interlinking

The latest practice apparently added to the list of undesirables is crosslinking or interlinking. Made for the SE sites are linked together in an attempt to artificially inflate PageRank.

"Cross-linking - If your entire site is sitting at PR0, one possibility is a cross-linking penalty. Sometimes a webmaster who controls two or more websites will place links from every page of one website to every page of the other sites to increase the PageRank ofall the sites. If detected, this will quickly incur a penalty if not an outright ban from the Google index."

Why's My Sites PageRank Now Zero

/pagerank-penalty.html

Among other indicators, factors which might prompt discovery of crosslinkage could be:

Same content verbatim

Same cookie structure

Javascript function names

Linked CSS and JS files

CSS class names

Same contact information posted on websites

Common name servers

Same/similar images and/or graphics theme

Site hosted on same IP/block

Whois information matching

Alexa contact information matching

Interlinking of domains

Common backlinks (indirect crosslinking)

Same credit card used for anything

Login from same IP to separate accounts

Residual cookies from past logins

Similar file names or linking/directory structures

Code Comments

It used to be considered relatively safe to have as many inbound links as possible. Regardless of source. Over the course of this year, that assumption has spawned link purchase, and hidden crosslinking. Nowsites must also be very careful about inbound links. The crosslinked and purchased links networks have been devalued. Sites linking to those types of networks have reported decreasing traffic, and finally,over the past month or so, a number of such sites have been completely dropped from the index.

Whether this was a manual removal or an algorithm shift can't be determined without proprietary information from inside Google, which we already know isn't possible. Remember Google's SE spam fighting philosophy: "Google prefers developing scalable and automated solutions to problems, so we attempt to minimize hand-to-hand spam fighting. The spam reports we receive are used to create scalable algorithms that recognize and block future spam attempts.

The crosslinking tactics alone used are consistent with those of other sites that -are- considered spam and may have been reported as such. If Google should target those characteristics based on spam reports for other sites, then it is not surprising that homeboundmortgage would be caught by the same adjustments to the algorithm or filters, and be dropped from the index as well.

5. Over Optimization Penalty

This summer, a new term has emerged, Over Optimization Penalty, which refers to the tweaks most seo make to pages to "fine tune" them to the top of their keyword categories. Page length, Keyword Density, bold, underline, italic, H1 formulas, link text, and various other small elements are manipulated until the perfect balance is struck, and the SEO'd site contains just a small bit more than the other sites in the top 10. It can be a full time job keeping a site at that level with these small changes. Google has lowered the bar, now effectively saying that high keyword densities, and many of the other seo tweaks are evidence of too much SEO. Filters are created, and such sites drop in the rankings. Sites that have been playing too close to the edge are penalized.

ALT Text

Keyword in Alt text Not only does this contribute to ideal word count, it may show keyword stuffing in the ALT tags. To clean up, switch to clear text navigation.

Old Link Exchanges

Pages stored in the Internet Archive may indicate the site was once involved in some questionable link exchanges.

Duplicate Content

All duplicate pages should be eliminated. Link just one page consistently.

Now, once all these changes have been made, what to do. You can, of course, try writing "We do not make any guarantees about if or when we will re-include your site."

Webmaster Guidelines | Not Listed

/webmasters/2.html

I personally know of only 4 sites that have been re-included after manual removal. In each case, the site was crawled regularly, but was not included in the index for over six months. I don't know the specific reason for this, of course, but I would imagine it might be some sort of a testing period. How strong is a webmaster's resolve to walk the straight and narrow, despite lack of indexing.

So, assuming best case, you might be looking at six months or more before your sites are re-included in the index. Once delisted, I also imagine such sites must stay squeaky clean. An SE might forgive once, but seldom twice.

6. Looking Ahead

VERY worst case, permanent exclusion from organic results on Google. Recovery basically means starting over, nearly from scratch. Plan a 12-18 month Overture or AdWords campaign, originally targeting the current website. Pick more specifically targeted keyword phrase initially, to keep costs down. I realize this is a high priced keyword neighborhood. You may need to create new, perfectly targeted landing pages to lower acquisition costs.

Select a new domain name. Without reinclusion within a short period of time, the current name will continue to lose value daily.

Build a new, clean site under the new domain name. Text must be fresh, not a duplicate of the current domain. Do not duplicate site structure, filenames, or other elements that could link it to the banned name.

Gradually add organic links. Expect it to take 6-12 months in order to acquire 1,000 related links. Continue to link to related sites over the next 18 months. Grow the site adding one new page (250-500 words) each day.

As the new site rises in the SERPs gradually switch the PPC traffic to the new site, and retire the current site completely. At any point in the process, if the current (old) site should reappear, it shouldn't be an undue amount of work to gradually retarget the newly acquired links to the older site. Encourage natural link text by those linking to the site.

If you're going to optimize at all, test first in a safely isolated site. You're not going to be able to push the optimization envelope for quite some time. The key to long-term survival and growth will need to be the "content is king" model.

The only bright news in the picture is that the site isn't being meta-hijacked, at least not under any of the keywords I've tried (your homepage META keywords list.) Google itself wouldn't encourage such a practice, and in fact will likely be glad to deal with any such offenders under the DMCA.

Sources:

Crosslink Detection

/forum3/25568.htm

Crosslinking Penalty

/forum3/23890-2-10.htm

Sandbox Effect

/web-site-promotion-articles-en/about-google-search-engine-promotion-tips_page1_seo60.html

Innocent Interlinking of Sites

/forum3/25564.htm

A Statistical and Experimental Analysis of Google's Florida Update

/pub/florida-report.html

Speculation About August Changes

/forum3/25251.htm

If the sites were dropped due to algorithm changes, then its possible that they'd come back after cleanup. However, their supporting network of links has, at the very least, been devalued. That alone will cause a change in PR, even if cleanup makes them eligible for reinclusion. Site owners report that in these cases, cleaned up sites have come back into the results in 2-3, to six months. Getting back to the top would take additional time, and new, unblemished linking.

Two schools of thought. After clean-up, resubmit the site, or allow it to be found via linkage. Though Google states that there's no oversubmission penalty, most webmasters tend to be leary of such submission, allowing robots to find the site via linkages. I've never had a problem with resubmitting URLs that have dropped out for whatever reason. I take Google at their word that it's harmless, as long as its a manual resubmission for good reason (for example, page down when the crawler came through), not submission through a service or promotion program. One submission is enough. Either way, watch the site logs. If robots don't show up, it could well be a case of manual deletion and permanent ban.

The site needs to be squeaky clean for the near term. The days of easy seo are on hiatus. The old-fashioned methods (content for users, natural linking) are back. Iconocast has quite a backlog of goodwill links left. Those must be preserved and strengthened, while getting rid of harmful inbound linking.

Again, there's no guarantee or certainty of getting back into the Google index. Same procedures, same wait and see.

Sources:

The August Chronicles

/forum3/25553.htm

Denial of Google Over Optimization Penalty

/googleguy-says/archives/discuss-denial-of-google-over-optimization-penalty.html

Future of SEO

/SCRIPTS/WA.EXE?A2=ind0408&L=led&D=1&T=0&H=1&O=D&F=&S=&P=266

7. Finally , Should you have questions about the information or links provided, please, feel free to ask on our seo Forum

Best regards,

Tiberiu Bazavan , ZettWalls Media



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