We changed our URL and our impressions dropped almost 100%

We changed our URL and our impressions dropped almost 100% - If a page has internal and external outgoing links to redirecting URLs, it’s returning 3xx (301, 302, etc.) HTTP status codes standing for redirection. This issue means that the page does not exist on a permanent or temporary basis. It appears on most of the popular web browsers, usually caused by a misconfigured website. However, there are some steps you can take to ensure the issue isn’t on your side. You can find more details about redirecting URLs by reading the Google Search Central overview. In this article, we’ll go over how you can fix the We changed our URL and our impressions dropped almost 100% error on your web browser. Problem :


The company I worked for changed their domain about a month ago and updated the URLs for all of the pages. We mostly removed the .aspx from the ends and decreased the depth of many of our pages. We created a sitemap.xml for the new site and added 301 redirects from the old pages to the new within the site. We did update our address through Googles Webmaster tool so they know.



Once Google crawled our site we saw a drop in our Google imprints from nearly 1000 to just 20-30 a day. We know we missed a few redirects that have now been fixed (probably less than 10%) but we are still not going back up in impressions.



Is there anything we should be looking into or is this just a natural occurrence caused by us switching pages and domains?


Solution :

While you seem to have solved your problem, you may still experience this same phenomenon going forward. 301 Redirects are Google's recommended way to move content, however they have at least some decaying effect on Page Rank. Google's Matt Cutts was interviewed in March 2010 by Stone Temple Consulting. From the full transcript of his interview:




Eric Enge: Let’s say you move from one domain to another and you write yourself a nice little statement that basically instructs the search engine and, any user agent on how to remap from one domain to the other. In a scenario like this, is there some loss in PageRank that can take place simply because the user who originally implemented a link to the site didn't link to it on the new domain?



Matt Cutts: That's a good question, and I am not 100 percent sure about the answer. I can certainly see how there could be some loss of PageRank. I am not 100 percent sure whether the crawling and indexing team has implemented that sort of natural PageRank decay, so I will have to go and check on that specific case. (Note: in a follow on email, Matt confirmed that this is in fact the case. There is some loss of PR through a 301).


Since your content has not changed, just the paths that get you there, as the new links begin to age your Page Rank should return to its previous levels.



Note that this question referred specifically to changing domains, and not to inter-domain redirects, so the effect may be less noticeable.



I figured out my issue.



You can use a Google Analytics account to track a domain and if you change the domain name and do a 301 redirect from the old to the new you can use the same Analytics tracking code. Note, the 301 isn't required though.



However, Google Webmaster does not work the same. When you switch domain names you will need to add the new domain to your domains in your Webmaster account.



Also, there will be some artifacts on your old domain. For instance Google may try to search for specific pages from its cache on the old domain and any related errors will show up for you old domain. In addition, you will still see some page ranking returns for the old domain for at least 2 weeks afterwords, if not even longer. This seems odd to me but I am assuming it is Google's caching system and if you do all of your redirects correctly it will not be an issue.


We hope that this article has helped you resolve the seo, traffic, redirects error in your web browsers. Enjoy browsing the internet uninterrupted!

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