1. All major Google algo changes (that I know of, at least since 2003/4) have almost always caused collateral damage. Many times, they have kind of turned back the knobs somewhat later to reduce the extent of such damage.
2. Given the size of their index, a major algo change can take up to weeks to stabilise; things might still be in a state of flux and what you're observing now just might not be permanent.
I'd not give up hope just yet and give it some more time before drawing any finite conclusions. In the meanwhile, one would just have to bite the bitter bullet in terms of revenue loss. :-(
I don't see how this Blog isn't a 'Content Farm'?
The site is full of low quality click driven articles - Nothing wrong with it, I'm guilty too. But its nieve to think that you can drive a product and profit off a search engine algorithm.
But hey if your running a not so well known blog and are trying to get traffic, why not write an article saying you were unfairly targeted by Google. Overall this is a current hot topic, might as well try turn this current zeitgeist into a win for your blog or website(gain more traffic & readers).
How much is "tons" ? If only articles that are linked then that's about 200. I don't know how many articles there are in total in this blog but it looks like there are between 1800 to 18000. Thus original content is between 1% and 10%. Of course I might be wrong and I will leave anyone to give correct information but not my rough estimates made in 1 minute. At the moment I see it as content farm with some original content.
I don't want to be mean, but, I just read through several articles on that site, and regardless of weather or not it is a content farm it feels a little like one. That is to say we can't know what the Google algorithm is doing for sure but it's safe to say it isn't able know what a site authors true intentions are. So while the author probably means well I won't be to heart broken that this particular site will be a little further down in the Google ranking; farm or not.
Tutorial: "How to use Drop Box to back up your files"
Instructions: Save your files to your drop box folder
Tutotial: "How to host your website on amazon S3"
Instructions: Save your files to S3 and point a web browser at them.
If the content is of such low quality, why couldn't you find a couple of examples that could support your point without having to grossly misrepresent them?
12 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 31.3 ms ] threadYou can't know this. Other factors might be at play as well…
1. All major Google algo changes (that I know of, at least since 2003/4) have almost always caused collateral damage. Many times, they have kind of turned back the knobs somewhat later to reduce the extent of such damage.
2. Given the size of their index, a major algo change can take up to weeks to stabilise; things might still be in a state of flux and what you're observing now just might not be permanent.
I'd not give up hope just yet and give it some more time before drawing any finite conclusions. In the meanwhile, one would just have to bite the bitter bullet in terms of revenue loss. :-(