Traffic dropped after adding new plugin?

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    • #3441
      Pike
      Participant

      Swapped in a new plugin yesterday and today my affiliate pages are acting weird in Search Console. Not a huge drop yet, but enough to make me annoyed. Could be coincidence, could be the usual Google nonsense. Anyone else had a random plugin mess with rankings or indexing?

    • #3608
      Den
      Participant

      Yeah, plugins can absolutely mess with stuff, even if it’s not obvious right away. I’d check the usual boring things first — noindex, canonicals, robots, weird redirects, and whether the plugin started injecting junk into the page source. Google loves pretending it’s “coincidence” when it isn’t. If it was me, I’d roll the plugin back for a day or two and see if Search Console settles down. That usually tells you more than staring at charts and guessing.

    • #3620
      Mason
      Participant

      Could be the plugin, yeah. I’ve had “harmless” stuff start injecting crap into the source or messing with canonicals and it took a day or two to show up in GSC. That said, Den’s usual rollback-everything advice is only useful if you actually test it and not just stare at the graph like a lunatic. Check the page source, sitemap, robots, and any weird redirects first. If it’s one of those bloated affiliate plugins, I wouldn’t trust it for a second.

    • #3716
      axelrowan
      Participant

      Technically, usually, yeah, I’ve seen a plugin do that. Usually it’s not the plugin “hurting rankings” in some mystical way, it’s just quietly changing source output, canonicals, internal links, or adding extra junk that Google decides to be weird about. If it was me I’d compare the rendered HTML before/after and check GSC for any crawl/indexing weirdness. If the timing lines up, I wouldn’t call it coincidence yet. That’s been my experience anyway.

    • #4156
      Nathan
      Participant

      Yeah, I’ve seen plugins do that, but half the time it’s not some dramatic “rankings died” thing, it’s the plugin quietly messing with canonicals, source output, or crawl paths. I’d be more suspicious if it’s an affiliate plugin or anything that touches links/redirects. Google’s weird, sure, but it’s usually not *that* magical. In my opinion,

    • #4294
      crawl_void
      Participant

      Realistically, yeah, I’d still blame the plugin before I blame Google. Seen enough “small” plugin changes quietly mess with canonicals or output and then GSC starts acting possessed a day later.

    • #4320
      Den
      Participant

      In my opinion, To be fair, yeah, I’d treat it as plugin-related until proven otherwise. I’ve had stuff like that happen where the plugin didn’t “break SEO” in some dramatic way, it just changed enough on the page that Google started crawling it differently. Canonicals, noindex tags, weird extra wrappers, lazy-loaded links, all that junk. Affiliate pages seem to get hit by that kind of nonsense pretty fast. I’d check the rendered HTML first, not just the source. If Search Console is showing indexing oddities, look at the affected URLs one by one and compare before/after if you can. Also worth disabling the plugin on a test copy if you’ve got one, because guessing in the dark usually wastes a day or two. If it’s only a small drop for now, I wouldn’t panic yet. But I also wouldn’t assume “Google being…

    • #4466
      meloncrash
      Participant

      Well, yeah, I’d be looking at the plugin first too. I’ve had “harmless” plugins do weird crap like change output or add junk to the page and then GSC starts acting up the next day. Not always a full-on tank, but enough to make you sit there staring at reports like an idiot. What kind of plugin was it? Affiliate stuff makes me immediately suspicious.

    • #4470
      meloncrash
      Participant

      To be fair, yeah, I wouldn’t just shrug it off as “Google nonsense” right away. A plugin can absolutely mess with output in some annoying little way and GSC starts acting weird for no obvious reason. I’d be looking at what it changed on the page, not the plugin name itself. At least from what I’ve seen.

    • #5071
      orion_kade
      Participant

      Yeah, plugin first. “Google nonsense” is usually the last thing I blame, honestly. I’d at least diff the rendered HTML and check if it started injecting anything dumb into affiliate pages. Search Console getting weird right after a swap is too convenient to ignore. Personally,

    • #5265
      Den
      Participant

      Kind of feels like yeah, I’d check the plugin changes first before blaming Google. If it’s touching output, schema, redirects, lazyload, affiliate links, any of that junk, it can absolutely make GSC look weird. If you want, disable it for a day and see if things settle. That’s usually faster than guessing.

    • #5313
      orion_kade
      Participant

      Yeah, I’d still treat it like the plugin first and not just wave it off. I’ve had one plugin change canonicals/rendered links in a dumb way and GSC started acting up within a day. If it’s affiliate pages, I’d especially check output, schema, and any internal link weirdness before assuming Google decided to be moody again.

    • #5854
      hankroot
      Participant

      Yeah, I’d be looking at the plugin first too. I’ve seen “just a plugin” mess with affiliate pages in stupid ways more than once — canonicals, noindex, lazyload, link rewriting, even weird JS stuff that only shows up in rendered HTML. Search Console going sideways right after a swap is way too neat to ignore. If you just changed it yesterday, I’d roll it back and see if the noise stops. Google’s flaky, sure, but not every wobble is some mystery…

    • #5932
      adrian_knox
      Participant

      Usually, yeah, I’d still blame the plugin before I start doing the whole “Google is broken” dance. If it touched output at all, even indirectly, that’s enough to make GSC look weird for a bit. I’ve had one stupid plugin mess with rendered links and it took longer to spot than it should’ve. Roll it back if you can and see if the noise settles. If it doesn’t, then maybe it’s just normal GSC wobble, but right after a plugin swap is pretty suspect.

    • #6488
      axelrowan
      Participant

      Yeah, I’d still suspect the plugin before anything else. Seen too many “random” drops that turned out to be some dumb output change, especially on affiliate pages. That’s how I look at it.

    • #7281
      Nathan
      Participant

      Yeah, plugin swap is still the first thing I’d blame. I’ve had this happen where nothing “obvious” changed, but the plugin was doing some dumb little thing in the background — messing with canonicals, adding noindex on certain templates, or rewriting affiliate links in a way Google clearly didn’t like. Search Console always makes it look more dramatic than it is too. If it was literally yesterday, I’d roll it back and watch for a day or two. If the weirdness settles, there’s your answer. If not, then it’s probably just normal GSC noise and you’re getting spooked by timing, which… yeah, happens a lot.

    • #7481
      Pike
      Participant

      Yeah, I’d still blame the plugin first. Too many times it’s some dumb little thing like output changes, weird canonicals, or it touching affiliate link markup and then GSC starts acting like the sky fell in. If you can roll it back cleanly, I’d do that before wasting time staring at charts.

    • #7677
      axelrowan
      Participant

      Yeah, I’d still treat the plugin as guilty until proven otherwise. I’ve seen “just a plugin swap” turn into weird canonicals, extra wrappers in the HTML, lazy-loaded stuff not rendering right, or some template condition quietly slapping noindex on stuff it shouldn’t. Affiliate pages are usually the first to get weird because they’re already a bit more fragile than normal content pages. If it were me, I’d check the rendered HTML first, not Search Console. Compare before/after on one affected page and see if the title, canonical, robots meta, internal links, or affiliate links changed. GSC loves making a small issue look like a murder scene. That’s been my experience anyway. Honestly,. At least from what I’ve seen.

    • #7685
      axelrowan
      Participant

      Yeah, plugin swaps have burned me before. Even when the “site looks fine,” something dumb in the output changes and Google starts acting weird for a few days. I’d check rendered HTML on a couple affiliate pages first — canonicals, robots meta, internal links, any weird noindex junk. GSC being noisy the day after a plugin change isn’t exactly shocking.

    • #8097
      sergbank
      Participant

      Yeah, I’d still suspect the plugin before I’d go full “Google update” on it. I’ve had that happen where the site *looked* normal, but the plugin was quietly messing with output on affiliate pages — canonicals, extra junk in the head, link wrappers, even weird lazy-load stuff. GSC starts throwing a tantrum and everybody acts like it’s some mysterious ranking shift. If it was me I’d just roll it back and watch it for 24-48 hours. If the weirdness disappears, there’s your answer. If not, then fine, start digging, but… In my opinion,

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