Post by amirmukaddas on Mar 12, 2024 3:42:22 GMT -6
The penalty for duplicate text depends on how much text is copied in total, on the other elements that make up the web pages and on the scope of the project. duplicate text pages It is a very frequent question among those who develop a web project. I have already talked about text copied from other sites , but today I would like to stop and talk about the duplication of parts of text on multiple pages within the same website, gradually analyzing the most frequent cases. E-commerce and descriptive texts If you manage an e-commerce site, know that I'm about to make you happy by saying once and for all that you don't have to worry if your product sheets often have the exact same descriptions.
Google knows very well that in many cases the descriptive elements for products of the same type tend to coincide, so if your e-commerce sells cosmetics and the descriptions of the mascaras are all the same you don't risk a penalty , don't worry. Google simply won't take duplicate text into account. If you have pieces of text that are all the same and not relevant , I suggest you make them visible when you click on a tab , because Denmark Telegram Number Data Google attributes the greatest value to the elements that it manages to scan when rendering the page and consequently takes low consideration of the texts that they are not immediately visible. Fake localization It's a cheerful term to describe corporate websites (mostly) that create a page for each Italian provincial capital , aimed at selling services specifically in that area. The text of the page is always the same, practically only the name of the city changes.
I know this positioning technique well because in 2008 I spent days putting it into practice on the website of my first web agency. At the time it worked quite well because web agencies did not yet grow on trees like they do now, but today I would suggest this practice only in low competition conditions , precisely in cases where you have no "real" competitors, because on averagely competitive SERPs, this kind of duplication of text produces penalties within a few months (I can't be precise without talking about it on a case by case basis) unless the website has a high trust which in many cases works as a real space shield against penalties . Getting angry is useless.
Google knows very well that in many cases the descriptive elements for products of the same type tend to coincide, so if your e-commerce sells cosmetics and the descriptions of the mascaras are all the same you don't risk a penalty , don't worry. Google simply won't take duplicate text into account. If you have pieces of text that are all the same and not relevant , I suggest you make them visible when you click on a tab , because Denmark Telegram Number Data Google attributes the greatest value to the elements that it manages to scan when rendering the page and consequently takes low consideration of the texts that they are not immediately visible. Fake localization It's a cheerful term to describe corporate websites (mostly) that create a page for each Italian provincial capital , aimed at selling services specifically in that area. The text of the page is always the same, practically only the name of the city changes.
I know this positioning technique well because in 2008 I spent days putting it into practice on the website of my first web agency. At the time it worked quite well because web agencies did not yet grow on trees like they do now, but today I would suggest this practice only in low competition conditions , precisely in cases where you have no "real" competitors, because on averagely competitive SERPs, this kind of duplication of text produces penalties within a few months (I can't be precise without talking about it on a case by case basis) unless the website has a high trust which in many cases works as a real space shield against penalties . Getting angry is useless.