Hello,
Like many webmasters, my site was also hit by the Penguin update. I still have roughly the same amount of pages indexed, but traffic has dropped by about half. It's very disappointing to say the least.
I add new, original content to the site almost daily, and haven't changed the design/backend/seo in about 4 years. My site was actually growing year by year in terms of content, traffic, and sales, and I'm completely "white hat" in terms the optimization techniques used.
In fact, I only employ on-site seo, and have never relied on any shady tactics whatsoever out of fear of being penalized by Google. I read the description of the sites and tactics that the Penguin update was intended to target, and my site does not fit the description by any means.
In addition, I held the #1 spot for a very popular keyword for 3+ years. I am still on the first page for those keywords, but I am no longer in the top 3. The sites that are now in the top 3 all have unoriginal, low-quality, and even duplicate content. And I'm not just saying that out of bias.
I have spent the last 5 years building up an authoritative site only to have low quality sites now preceding mine in Google's search results. From what I have read and seen, I feel that the Penguin update has actually done the opposite of what it was intended to.
My question is: Where do we go from here?
Is it worth waiting out/doing nothing?
Should we be making changes to our sites?
Complain to Google?
etc.
FYI: In the last 5 years, I have hardly paid any attention at all to Google's algorithmic updates. I was never impacted by them "for the worse" until now.
Like many webmasters, my site was also hit by the Penguin update. I still have roughly the same amount of pages indexed, but traffic has dropped by about half. It's very disappointing to say the least.
I add new, original content to the site almost daily, and haven't changed the design/backend/seo in about 4 years. My site was actually growing year by year in terms of content, traffic, and sales, and I'm completely "white hat" in terms the optimization techniques used.
In fact, I only employ on-site seo, and have never relied on any shady tactics whatsoever out of fear of being penalized by Google. I read the description of the sites and tactics that the Penguin update was intended to target, and my site does not fit the description by any means.
In addition, I held the #1 spot for a very popular keyword for 3+ years. I am still on the first page for those keywords, but I am no longer in the top 3. The sites that are now in the top 3 all have unoriginal, low-quality, and even duplicate content. And I'm not just saying that out of bias.
I have spent the last 5 years building up an authoritative site only to have low quality sites now preceding mine in Google's search results. From what I have read and seen, I feel that the Penguin update has actually done the opposite of what it was intended to.
My question is: Where do we go from here?
Is it worth waiting out/doing nothing?
Should we be making changes to our sites?
Complain to Google?
etc.
FYI: In the last 5 years, I have hardly paid any attention at all to Google's algorithmic updates. I was never impacted by them "for the worse" until now.