Pinterest Is Bringing Guided Search To Desktop Users In The Next Few Weeks
Pinterest wants to be the search engine that helps people find things that they didn’t even know they were looking for. Two months ago, the company rolled out Guided Search on mobile devices and billed it as a revolutionary way for its users to consume and browse Pinterest, which CEO Ben…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
New “Google My Business” Simplifies Local Marketing For SMBs
For quite some time since the introduction of Google+ Local, managing local listings and content across Google properties has confused many local SEOs and local business owners alike. Now Google has launched a new and more integrated approach called Go…
The Best Chrome Extensions for SEO (and Life In General)
Having grown up with the internet for most of my memorable life, I’ve seen my share of browsers come and go (and, in some cases, unfortunately not go…) But Chrome is, by far, my favorite. The best part about Chrome is its customizability. I have 13 different “users” set up on my browser (how’s that […]
Yummly Partners With DuckDuckGo To Serve Up Recipes For The Growing Search Engine
Yummly announced today it will be powering the results for recipe searches performed on DuckDuckGo, the search engine built on protecting the privacy of its users. “Yummly’s technology understands recipe search queries and we’ve worked together to create a great recipe instant…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
How To Manage Bids For AdWords Shopping Ads
Last month, I covered the basics of how Shopping campaigns in AdWords differ from Search campaigns. The key finding I had was that, with Search, you have to add keywords to target more queries. In Shopping, all queries that match your products are targ…
How to Do Awesome SEO Annotations
The benefits of doing an SEO review of early-stage wireframes or visual designs are hard to quantify, but very real. Here’s a quick guide to doing SEO annotations that will make your sites better while educating your colleagues on best practices.
Bing Sitemaps Best Practices & Large Site Sitemaps Issues
Bing has posted on the Bing Webmaster blog their best practices on how to implement XML Sitemaps files for your site. The post includes a large topic on how the best practices apply to really large web sites, with many URLs. Bing’s Six Best Practices For Sitemaps: Follow the sitemaps…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Another New Easter Egg In Google Maps: Travel By Royal Carriage
Google announced a new easter egg in Google Maps today via Google+ where if you do driving directions from Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle, Google Maps will offer driving directions via Royal Carriage. This comes about a week after Google disclose…
Moz Analytics Gains Not Provided Report
Moz announced they have a new report that helps SEOs and webmasters with the [not provided] problem. Not provided is where Google is no longer reporting keyword data in Google Analytics and other analytics products. This report aims to help a bit wit…
Bing: You Can Have Up To 125 Trillion URLs In Sitemaps
Fabrice Canel, the Principal Program Manager of the Bing Index Generation team, posted their Sitemaps best practices guide for large web sites.
Bing says they can support up to 125 trillion links through multiple XML sitemap files…
Royal Carriage Transit Directions In Google Maps
The other week we had Google Maps directions by Loch Ness Monster and this week…
Google Glass Gets World Cup Scores, Parking Location Reminders & Package Tracking
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It will reminder you where you par…
Google AdSense Ads Without Ad URLs
Some Google AdSense publishers are reporting seeing AdSense ad units without the URL and fav icon displaying.
Folks at WebmasterWorld have reported this saying Google is testing an ad unit that removes the URL and icon…
3 Tips for Selling SEO
Successfully selling SEO requires you to wrap your head around important “pain points” and goals of a prospect, and speak to that. Here are a few tips you can use to help cut through the techno-babble, relate to a prospect, and close some business.
Lessons Learnt from Chinwag Psych
Jo Turnbull attends Chinwag Psych London and discovers how much psychology and understanding your consumers impact marketing and sales.
Post from Jo Turnbull on State of Digital
Lessons Learnt from Chinwag Psych
Are your own sites harming your SEO strategy?
What is cannibalisation and semantic flux?
We all know that duplicate content will hamper your search performance. We also have a pretty good idea that duplicate theming can create keyword cannibalisation within a site (see chart below) and should be dealt with, but we tend to hope that Google will know the difference.
But what about similar theming across sub-domains; across international sites, or sites that have entirely different domains owned by the same group?
Below we see that if sites are semantically related Google may find it hard to decipher between them. This impact, which I call ‘semantic flux’ is down to more than duplication, this is domain conflict.
Why is this an issue?
This conflict could be happening to your site. The challange is, whether your site structure and the content offering are compounding the issue.
Businesses need to manage multiple assets, but if these are conflicting in Google it poses a great challenge for multiple departments from content developers, to webmasters to digital management.
Here I will show examples of this flux within sites that are semantically related, not just through a domain but also through a higher layer of association.
The elements behind for semantic flux and cannibalisation
- Duplication of content or theming – this could even be very general theming.
- No clear canonical page.
- A perceived relationship (on domain/cross domain/sub-domain etc).
- Google identifies the relationship and penalises one.
- It is visible in the SERPS.
Four types of semantic flux and cannibalisation
Below are examples of the different types of cannibalisation and semantic flux using Pi Datametrics.
The different coloured lines represent the performance of separate URLs in Google UK for particular search terms.
1. Internal conflict: keyword cannibalisation
When two pages within a site vie for the same search term it is generally referred to as keyword cannibalisation which is an internal conflict.
This conflict can be remedied with appropriate redirects, re-theming, landing pages and a better internal linking structure.
Cannibalisation often occurs when a product page is competing with a landing page and Google cannot decipher between the two. This result could be due to lack of content, the strength of the links or overall theming duplication.
Below is an example of RyanAir where Google can not decide which page within the site should be returned for the search term ‘flights to Hungary’.
As you can see the light blue line was doing performing in position two for a while, then suddenly dropped. After this drop Google then throws up three other URLs in the original page’s place, which never regain page one positions.
Chart 1: Internal keyword cannibalisation. Site: Ryanair.com. Search term: Flights to Hungary

2. Sub-domain conflict
Caused by duplicate theming (even at a very high level) across sub-domains, an example of this is a news page competing with a landing page elsewhere on the site.
Google nowadays generally only features one sub-domain in the SERPs even if both domains offer different content for a general term.
This will mean that in many instances sub-domains are competing with each other this could be difficult to sort out if different sub-domains have separate P&Ls and business models eg the gambling sector.
In the example below Asos (yellow) is competing directly with its own marketplace site (pink). Here we see that every few days Google swaps the sub-domain it is returning for the search term.
At no point does either site make it onto page one of the SERPs for this term.
Chart 2.1: Sub-domain cannibalisation. Site: Asos.com. Search term: Wool cardigan

This sub-domain cannibalisation can happen across an unlimited number of sub-domains within one domain. Remember www. is also regarded as a subdomain.
The more general the term, the more likely there will be conflict across the sub-domains.
Below is an example of three sub-domains vying for the same search term. In this instance the search term ‘grand national betting’ is extremely competitive and newsworthy.
Coral below seems to be pushing a lot of content out in the run-up to the race, but to no avail as each sub-domain brings the other down. Notice how when a new one appears, it seems to bring down the performance of the previous one.
Chart 2.2: 3-way Sub-domain cannibalisation. Site: Coral.co.uk Search term: Grand National Betting
When creating sub-domains with similar theming a real understanding of the semantic relationships need to be taken into account.
However, within some industries the managers of separate subdomains will have separate P&Ls and may rarely even collaborate on their content strategies.
So if a gambling site has a ‘poker’ subdomain and a ‘casino’ sub-domain which one should appear for the search term ‘texas hold’em’?
3. International site conflict
Conflict occurs most frequently between same language sites such as US and UK this is usually down to duplicate theming or duplicate content.
Any duplicate theming will have a negative impact in the search engines for both sites. Telling Google through relevant rel=alt tags and webmaster tools can remedy this.
Below we see conflict between a search made in the UK, but the USA site is conflicting with the UK site. Both pages on the hotels website are extremely similar, therefore Google can not separate them and is probably penalising one for duplicate content.
This page set up and content strategy therefore isn’t good for the user who could find themselves on an American site when they are after a UK one, or the search bot.
Chart 3.1: International site conflict. Site: hotelscombined.com and hotelscombined.co.uk Search term: Hotels in Texas
4. Family site conflict
This is perhaps the version of conflct that impacts strategy most. Here we see sites within a family of sites, which offer similar themed content (or in some cases duplicate content) that leads to impact.
Sometimes sites that offer entirely different services, but may allude to a subject matter could see a semantic flux. (We saw a major brand that has a finance offering impact with their trans-Atlantic airline offering).
This is more difficult to remedy and will impact entire online strategies.
Chart 4.1: Family of sites conflict. Site: rbs.co.uk and natwest.com Search term: Secured loan

With this family impact for some search terms we see one site doing well, and the other simply going up and down, unable to penetrate the other’s performance.
Above we see a direct synchronisation of performance between the two sites, this is clearly due to the similarities in content.
The image below shows RBs’s and Natwest’s ‘Offset Mortgages’ page.
Duplicate content and site structure can harm your performance
Family site conflict
But not all semantic flux is down to duplicate content. Here for Currys and PCWorld we see flux for the term ‘gaming computer’.
There is obviously a relationship between the two businesses but the pages on offer here are different enough not to be affected by duplicate content.
In fact many sites have similar content to these ecommerce type pages across the SERPs but it is due to the relationship that these brands have that they are being penalised.
Chart 4.2: Family of sites conflict. Site: currys.co.uk and pcworld.co.uk Search term: Gaming computer

Below are the pages returning for ‘gaming computer’, obviously similar (snippet) content but not identical as with the example above.

Again in the gaming sector we see Currys and PC World impact eachother’s search positions in the below chart despite the content being different enough.
Chart 4.3: Family of sites conflict. Site: currys.co.uk and pcworld.co.uk Search term: Gaming computer

The impact on content strategy and structure
When setting in place a URL strategy the semantic relationships that sites have across sub-domains, family sites or even stable-mate sites need to be considered.
These examples of cannibalisation show that simply creating a new sub-domain and hoping for multiple positions in the SERPs is simply not a solution.
Furthermore, if your holding company purchases a new brand within your sector, having the different sites but with similar offerings will not mean double the search traffic.
Brands in travel, gambling, fashion, groceries and more need to seriously look at their duplicate theming across their domains to eradicate cross-domain cannibalisation and semantic flux.
Digital Design & User Experience Best Practices: Happiness + Profits!
We have more data than God wants anyone to have. We have more talent deployed than was ever true in history. We have more money being pumped into our ecosystem than ever before. We have our senior leadership involved like never before. Yet the end result of all that is so far away from where […]
Digital Design & User Experience Best Practices: Happiness + Profits! is a post from: Occam’s Razor by Avinash Kaushik
Your Google Algorithm Cheat Sheet: Panda, Penguin, and Hummingbird
Posted by MarieHaynes
If you’re reading the Moz blog, then you probably have a decent understanding of Google and its algorithm changes. However, there is probably a good percentage of the Moz audience that is still confused about the effects th…
Introducing N.A.P. Hunter Lite!
Hey local SEO geniuses! We just released a free Google Chrome extension to help you speed through citation research. It’s called N.A.P. Hunter Lite. It basically runs a set of standard N.A.P. queries through Google so you can quickly find various citations, their URLs and their Google position. Check it out here and let me […]
The post Introducing N.A.P. Hunter Lite! appeared first on Local SEO Guide.
