Duplicate Content, What is it… And Does It Matter?
In order to debunk this, it is best just to go to the source. Google describes duplicate content as:
“…substantive blocks of content within or across domains that either completely match other content or are appreciably similar.”
The rest of this article is located here. It goes on to say that duplicate content isn’t necessarily something that is instantly penalized for just existing. There are many instances when duplicate content is OK.
Mobile phone versions of sites, articles belonging to multiple categories, and printer friendly versions of pages are all recognized as multiple versions of the same content, not duplicate content. Even content that is syndicated is still considered to be the same even though it is spread across multiple domains.
Why It Has A Bad Rep
Duplicate content has a bad rep for one main reason. “People Have No Idea What They Are Talking About!” Yup, that pretty much sums it up. There are a bunch of other reasons too, but that one really does cover it.
Firstly, in that same article mentioned above, there is an area where they say duplicate content is a big no-no. It is mostly when a piece of content is spread across multiple domains in order to fool search results. Google doesn’t like this because users don’t like this and they want to please their users, and in turn, please their advertisers.
So, when someone is feeding the same thing on most of your search results, you kinda failed at the whole “delivering the best search results” thing. So, they make it a point to penalize anyone who is deliberately trying to fool search results. And Google is smart, they know when you’re trying to do it. So don’t.
Secondly, there are forum topics abound on duplicate content and how to handle it. This topic on the Warrior Forum garnered over 28,000 views and over 655 replies from so-called “experts” on what to do about where to place an article first for best results. This spins from then entire duplicate content misconception.
Next, there is a whole arsenal of tools out there said to rid you of the “Duplicate Content Penalty”. There are checkers, spinners, and many other tools available to help rid you of this cursed disease. Some are free, most are paid. So it only makes sense to hype up the whole duplicate content thing in an effort to make sure you are good and scared enough to buy/use their products. To put it bluntly, there is profit to be made from fear and ignorance.
One of the best examples out there is Copy Scape. They first go under the premise of “Anti-Plagiarism” which was a good stance to take. No one wants their content stolen. Then they started to diverge into a more, “find out if your content you had written for you was just rehashed or reused.” Not bad, but a step toward the wrong direction. Now, right in their title, they have “Copyscape Plagiarism Checker – Duplicate Content Detection Software.” They have a pro feature that charges you a nickel for each search you do.
Am I saying Copyscape is some terrible company? No, they do provide a good service. But they now leverage the misconception of duplicate content for the sake of more profit.
How To Solve Duplicate Content Problems
If you want all your i’s dotted and all your t’s crossed, there are a number of things you can do to help Google out. First, you can stop peddling your crappy PLR all over the net. Now that I have that off my chest, we can talk about other solutions.
Canonical URLs
These are basically a way of telling Google and other search engines that the content found on this page via this link is the ACTUAL place to find the content. This helps solve any problems with your CMS’s giving google the same content multiple times via different URLs.
NoIndex
Another way to help out the SE’s is to tell them, not to index certain parts of your site. A good way of doing this is using the NoIndex meta tag for parts of your site that contain duplicate content across a different URL. This robots identifier lets the search engines know not to index this part of your site, and therefore, not include duplicate content.
Use 301 Redirects
If you are restructuring your site, use appropriate 301 redirects, (permanent redirect code). This tells Google that your content is on another url instead of just indexing it twice as duplicate content.
Syndicate Appropriately
Perhaps one of the final nails in this proverbial coffin of this duplicate content issue is the fact that Syndication even exists. If all duplicate content is considered bad, why would utilizing things such as RSS be considered GOOD by Google? There is a catch. When you syndicate, make sure that your RSS feed gives credit to the original content with an appropriate link. Most RSS feeds do this automatically with the title being a link to the original article. It is good just to double check, because you never know.
Other methods are also good practices, such as avoiding placeholder pages, also called stubs, TLD’s, avoiding unnecessary repetition, etc. They can be found at the Google link below.
All in all, you need to focus on providing GREAT content for the search engines, not just making sure your average piece of garbage article is the only one out there of it’s kind.
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