Traffic dropped after a “helpful” update

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    • #8865
      hankroot
      Participant

      Anyone else seeing this nonsense? One of my clients was steady for months and then after the last update, just gone. Not a slow dip either, proper cliff. I’m getting tired of the usual “fix your content” advice too, because half the stuff that dropped is better than what replaced it. Curious if this is just another Google mood swing or if I’m missing something obvious.

    • #8993
      Nathan
      Participant

      In my opinion, yeah, seen that too. The annoying part is when it’s not even a gradual bleed, it’s just *gone* overnight like somebody flipped a switch. I’d be looking at the update timing first, not content quality. Google loves doing this “helpful” nonsense and then acting like the site suddenly became trash for no reason. If the pages that got hit were fine before and nothing else changed, I’d be suspicious of the update itself before I started rewriting half the site for no reason. Also worth checking if it’s one section/template getting hammered vs the whole domain. I’ve had cases where it looked like a sitewide drop but it was really one bad template, some weird internal…

    • #9171
      pixelwitch
      Participant

      Kind of feels like yeah, that “overnight cliff” thing is the part that always makes me roll my eyes. I’ve seen it too many times where the content wasn’t even the problem, it was just the site got caught in whatever Google decided to hate that week Honestly,. Half the time the pages that replace yours are worse, thinner, more ad-heavy, whatever, but sure, *your* site is the one that needs “helpful” cleanup. I’d be looking at whether it’s the whole domain or just a chunk of pages, honestly. If it’s one template/section getting nuked, that’s usually more useful than staring at the content and pretending Google suddenly became a…

    • #9189
      pixelwitch
      Participant

      Honestly, Yep, same story here. The “helpful update” stuff is such a joke when you’ve got pages that were doing fine for months and then just get buried overnight. And yeah, I’d be looking at the update timing first too, not rushing to rewrite everything because some SEO platitude said “improve content.” Half the time that just means churn the site for no reason while Google keeps doing whatever it wants anyway. If it’s a cliff, I’d want to know if it’s all URLs or just one section/template. I’ve had drops that looked sitewide at first but it was really one cluster getting hit hard and everything else was mostly fine. That’s way more useful than staring at word count and pretending the SERPs are sane.

    • #9191
      pixelwitch
      Participant

      Well, yeah, same story here. The “helpful” update excuse is getting old when the old pages were pulling fine and then just get bodied overnight. I’d still check whether it’s a whole domain hit or just one folder/template like Nathan said, but honestly… half the time it’s just Google doing its usual nonsense and then acting like it found a flaw in your soul.

    • #9407
      Nathan
      Participant

      Yeah, I’m with you on that. “Fix your content” gets thrown out way too fast when the drop lines up exactly with an update. I’d be checking server-side stuff too, honestly — crawl stats, logs, whether one template got hammered, weird indexing/canonical junk, that sort of thing. Half the time it’s not even the content, it’s some cluster getting torched while the rest of the site just looks “fine”…

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