Comments on: What to Do When Your Website Ends Up in Google’s Omitted Results https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/ SEO Blog | cognitiveSEO Blog on SEO Tactics & Strategies Thu, 07 May 2020 02:03:14 +0300 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.3 By: Godstime Obasi https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/#comment-297747 Thu, 07 May 2020 02:03:14 +0000 https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/?p=17778#comment-297747 I was actually getting pissed off on how google omits my web pages.
Thanks so much for this article, it helped me a lot, I’m trying your tool right away

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By: Iqbal Ahmed khan https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/#comment-255293 Mon, 13 Jan 2020 13:55:01 +0000 https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/?p=17778#comment-255293 Show all websites

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By: King https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/#comment-250638 Mon, 30 Dec 2019 14:38:16 +0000 https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/?p=17778#comment-250638 My website usually appears on the omitted results but when I click to let Google include the omitted results, I find out that my post is ranking first or second o SERP

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By: Adrian Cojocariu https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/#comment-238275 Wed, 27 Nov 2019 12:49:20 +0000 https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/?p=17778#comment-238275 Erik, I’m not sure I get it very well how the site is actually structured but I can see how you can have airline pages where all the complaints appear instead of having separate pages for each complaint. That probably depends on the platform but I wouldn’t waste time indexing individual complaints when people are looking, in general, for a big page about the airline where all complaints are made.

So they should be merged in a page about that airline, but instead of changing everything, maybe you can just call all the posts using taxonomies in the airline page and then simply noindex nofollow the individual complaint pages to not burn crawl budget.

Again… not sure if it’s good advice because I’m not sure I understand everything very well.

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By: Adrian Cojocariu https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/#comment-238271 Wed, 27 Nov 2019 12:44:00 +0000 https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/?p=17778#comment-238271 Not easy to figure out without taking a clear look at the search console. My advice, use the search console to filter before and after update penalties to see the pages that were affected the most. Then try to look for patterns in those pages. If all pages were affected… not sure what to say. It could be link penalty, content penalty… could be anything.

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By: Erik https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/#comment-236017 Tue, 19 Nov 2019 08:52:26 +0000 https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/?p=17778#comment-236017 Hi Adrian,

First of all, this is truly amazing article! We run a website dealing with consumer complaints. Every complaint has itโ€™s own web page. Lots of the complaints have the same subject (Example: America Airlines – delayed flight). Rating of the company depends on how many complaints are resolved. What would be your suggestion in this case? Should we still merge them?

Thanks.

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By: Sandy https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/#comment-227893 Thu, 24 Oct 2019 10:23:49 +0000 https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/?p=17778#comment-227893 Hey Adrian,

Thanks for quick reply!

The website is not New. It was ranking No.1 for most of the Keywords until March Update.

After the Update, website tanked to 70-80 spots but quickly recovered in a month to same positions.

But, after the June update it has gone to 6-7 page for most of the keywords.

It is a authority site with backlinks from NyTimes and others.

Best,
Sandy

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By: Adrian Cojocariu https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/#comment-227888 Thu, 24 Oct 2019 10:03:13 +0000 https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/?p=17778#comment-227888 Hey, Sandy!

Usually, this happens with newer sites, even with new content.

My first response would be wait a little bit more, max 1 week and see if anything changes ๐Ÿ™‚

Do you have other articles indexed and ranking well? If no, then new site effect is most definitely the cause.

It’s called “Google Dance”, you’ll notice it, article jumps from positions to positions until it stays in a single spot.

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By: Sandy https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/#comment-227599 Wed, 23 Oct 2019 18:40:45 +0000 https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/?p=17778#comment-227599 Hi Adrian,

Thanks for awesome information!

I have a website on a small-medium keyword. There are around 10 Google Pages after which it starts showing the omitted results.

My content is well researched, original and above 1500 words. When I request indexing from Search Console, Google start showing it in 6th page, but after 24 hours the result is gone.

The site is indexed, has no manual action and shows in Search Console when inspected for specific url.

Can you show me some light ๐Ÿ™‚

Best,
Sandy

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By: Adrian Cojocariu https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/17778/google-omitted-results/#comment-193113 Thu, 04 Jul 2019 09:10:50 +0000 https://cognitiveseo.com/blog/?p=17778#comment-193113 Difficult to say, I’ll need more details to be able to answer.

Are there specific results omitted? Like the secondary service centers & locations?

Or are all pages omitted altogether?

When you say most, do you actually mean it?

First thing I’d do is eliminate all unnecessary content and try to compress it in a single page.

If you have thousands of companies and each has 5-10 locations, it doesn’t really make sense to have 5-10 pages for all locations.

Too many pages probably, while the site is not very popular and Google discredits it.

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