Look Mom No Home Page
#1
Posted 13 April 2010 - 09:05 PM
Basically when you go to the domain, you are instantly 301 redirected to a web page that shows the latest blog entry. That same redirection continues to apply until you add the next post, when the domain is then redirected to the new post. This means that the search engines will assume all the inlinks should be assigned to the current post. More often than not this is the right assignment since it is often the latest post that is of interest to most visitors.
If you look at SERPs for keywords that might be appropriate for your latest post, you may often find that Google shows the Home page first with the individual blog post indented below that. This change should ensure that it is always the blog post itself that ranks highest in the SERPs.
I'm not sure I see any downsides and I believe there are significant upsides. What do you think?
#2
Posted 13 April 2010 - 10:28 PM
1) Will the bots get confused?
2) Will people get confused? If I'm expecting to see a home page, and I don't, what will I think about that?
Those are my 2 concerns, but there's also one question I have. Is it ONLY the home page link that gets redirected? If I were to link to a post you wrote 3 months ago (a deep link), would the link still go to that post?
#3
Posted 13 April 2010 - 10:47 PM
However on your two questions, I don't think the bots will get confused and links to deep posts seem to be fine from very limited checking I have done.
The best test for me is to do a search for 'Look Mom No Home Page'. Before you would get the Home Page: now you get the post and it's only two hours since I published the post.
#4
Posted 14 April 2010 - 05:28 AM
The other concern is the feeling of disorientation, people like to go to the home page to learn about the author/company and get oriented as to where they are. If you take that ability away you risk confusing your visitors.
Edited by fairclb, 14 April 2010 - 06:04 AM.
#5
Posted 14 April 2010 - 08:05 AM
In fact visitors to any of the blogs will see no difference in what appears on the rendered page. The blogs always showed only the single latest post and that is unchanged. The only difference, if you spot it, is that the address in the address field is different.
As for the search engines, I believe there are advantages and I will be writing those up as I see them in the next week. However I would love to hear other people's guesses on how the search engines might be affected.
#6
Posted 14 April 2010 - 08:27 AM
My fear is that a 301 redirect could first your old pages getting no found when the system republishes the new post.
IE
Spider goes to domain.com
gets told that the page is actually
domain.com/greatpost.php
Spider goes away.
Spider comes back.
Visits domain.com/greatpost.php (because we told it that domain.com is no longer valid)
doesn't find it because in the meantime you've added a new post which would make the homepage as follows: domain.com/reallygreatpost.php
You miss the indexing because the spider don't go to homepage anymore.
Just thinking aloud.
Can you just set an extract for your homepage snippets.
ps. some engines won't follow the redirect, then what.
Good luck
#7
Posted 14 April 2010 - 09:43 AM
That's not how it works, glyn. domain.com/greatpost.php is the correct long term URL for that post and it will always be there. What we are doing is putting the spot light on that post and calling it the entry point to the domain for a time.Visits domain.com/greatpost.php (because we told it that domain.com is no longer valid)
doesn't find it because in the meantime you've added a new post which would make the homepage as follows: domain.com/reallygreatpost.php
That's not to say there are not lots of questions here. If the back links were pointing to domain.com will it index them against domain.com/greatpost.php. Next time around they will point to a different post so will they be switched.
All I know is that the present system has its drawbacks too. The domain shows up in SERPs when it may no longer be valid for certain keywords that have disappeared either down a long page or off the page entirely. That problem is avoided with this suggested approach.
On your search engines not accepting the 301 redirection, then it would be interpreted as a 302 redirection and there is then no effect on where back links are indexed.
Edited by bwelford, 14 April 2010 - 09:47 AM.
#8
Posted 14 April 2010 - 10:12 AM
serpforstaygolinks.png 28.44K
96 downloads
#9
Posted 14 April 2010 - 10:12 AM
#10
Posted 14 April 2010 - 02:44 PM
At this stage I'm uncomfortable recommending it for a real website. We'd also need to test 301 vs 302 redirects.
#11
Posted 14 April 2010 - 03:22 PM
directory index post.html
Try it and see, then come back with your findings. I guess you're attempting to push, for want of simplification, PR of the homepage to a new page as a temporary...at least that is one thing that might happen.
#12
Posted 14 April 2010 - 03:57 PM
Since PageRank is determined by numbers of inlinks, this should mean that the PageRanks of the other web pages will be higher since they directly get the inlinks rather than having internal links from the home page with its ? 85% discounting factor.
#13
Posted 14 April 2010 - 06:59 PM
Part of the reason for this is that the blog Home page has many back links or inlinks pointing to it which causes it to outrank new blog posts which have very few links. This after all is the fundamental principle of the Google search algorithm. The Home page has the highest PageRank and other web pages have lower values. Indeed if they are very recent, they may not even have a value assigned.
Of course, that PageRank is not making as big a difference as this article suggests. The blog home page usually ranks first because it is being recrawled immediately after the ping -- whereas it takes longer for the search engines to crawl and index the individual post pages.
Not all blogs embed their articles in standalone post pages -- search engines have no way of knowing in advance where the blog will share its content, so indexing the home page first makes a lot of sense.
If the blogger allows more than one post to appear on the front page, visitors can read more than one article. This, of course, screws up your analytics data because it looks like you get high bounce rates -- but none of the analytics software can accurately measure time-on-site or true bounces anyway.
I honestly don't see the value in doing this. The individual articles will be crawled and indexed and the blog should build brand value through its home page. If you're constantly redirecting visitors to the most recent blog post I doubt you'll build much brand value. You're discouraging natural visitor curiosity by making them work for more content.
Negatively impacting the user experience that is (in my guess) not going to benefit a blog over the long term.
#14
Posted 14 April 2010 - 09:13 PM
The only potential benefit I see is that if your post is the best link magnet on your site, then you make it slightly easier to link to your post. However, it doesn't seem to be a huge problem.
#15
Posted 15 April 2010 - 04:11 AM
http://www.youtube.c...h?v=wHcl8fsRhRM
#16
Posted 15 April 2010 - 09:27 AM
Of course the real question is how will this play out in long term indexing with Google. My guess is that if it looks good immediately, then it probably won't go sour over a longer period since there is nothing here that goes against the Guidelines. However who knows.
#17
Posted 16 April 2010 - 04:58 AM
Anyway, while redirecting the page may seem weird, I did try optimizing a homepage for just one keyword theme (twice) of the whole website (which seems to be a middle ground between redirecting and not acutely optimizing a homepage) and it did help somewhat (but not substantially). However, what's missing from the recipe is the amount of links *to the homepage* with related anchor text. So unless you are writing about a topic that's related to your homepage anchor text history, it'll be hard to see a good shift in rankings, it would seem.
Then again, it *is* an interesting experiment, so let's, indeed, wait and see
Edited by A.N.Onym, 16 April 2010 - 05:00 AM.
#18
Posted 16 April 2010 - 09:38 AM
In some ways it's more user friendly. Before you would have to click on the title to move to the single post, which had the link at the top to the previous post. Now that appears on the first page you see.
I'm very intrigued at what I'm seeing in the SERPs and will shortly report on that. For quick reference, I'm calling it the LMNHP approach, not to be confused with the Lucknow Muzaffarpur National Highway Project.
#19
Posted 16 April 2010 - 05:25 PM
Edited by A.N.Onym, 16 April 2010 - 05:26 PM.
#20
Posted 18 April 2010 - 09:45 AM
- BPWrap - Google search for Higher Rankings Without (70.4 million searches)
- OtherBB - Google search for Earth Day Langley (106,000 searches)
- Senior Money Memos - Google search for Senior Label (27.0 million searches)
- Staygolinks - Google search for Look Mom No Home (23.4 million searches)
a ) Will these results persist or will they suddenly change?
b ) Will these posts be equally visible once the next post comes in and takes their place as the 'front page' of the blog?
If you want to check out more of my thinking, then the BPWrap post on Higher Search Engine Rankings Without A Home Page, the #1 in the first search above, does give more. As usual, your thoughts on any aspect of this would be most helpful.
Edited by bwelford, 18 April 2010 - 10:12 AM.
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