I hope not... But why would they?
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I hope not... But why would they?
Where did you hear that?Quote:
Originally posted by Mike
A question for anyone...
Is google supposedly going to try and penalize sites with amazon feeds etc?
Thanks,
Mike:)
I read something about it on webmasterworld. It was just an idea one of the users their had but alltough I don't think it would be really penalizing the end result could be the same.
The way I see it, Google will keep promoting Froogle so all product-sellers put up a feed for Froogle. Once a great deal of the sellers have done this , there's no use in putting seller-websites in the regular google SERP's.
Ok no problem since we will be in the Froogle listing , right ? Wrong , guess who will be dominating the Froogle Serps ... Amazon, Bestbuy, ...
I hope this makes any sence and if it doesn't tell me why not. I've read an incredible amount of SEO stuff lately, so much actually that I'm seriously confused.
I've heard that they're trying to cut out all the affiliate sites. Then again, it could just be another rumour:rolleyes:
I wouldn't lose too much sleep over that rumor :)Quote:
Originally posted by Mike
Is google supposedly going to try and penalize sites with amazon feeds etc?
Hypothetically, if Google gave a penalty to affiliate sites, they might also go the extra step and not count (or de-emphasize) affiliate links.
So, hypothetically, "affiliate" sites wouldn't show up as prominently in the SERPs, and internet-wide affiliate revenue would go down. Affiliate links wouldn't count as much (or at all), big sites with the affiliate programs would loose inbound link numbers, and consequently their pages wouldn't show up as well on SERPs. So the big sites with affiliate/associate programs would loose revenue.
Now why would Google want to go to war with Amazon and the other affiliate networks?
And how would a search engine bot define what is and is not an "affiliate" site?
This is the reason why I don't think Google would do this. At least, I hope they don't having just built 3 Amazon affiliate sites.Quote:
Originally posted by GCT13
And how would a search engine bot define what is and is not an "affiliate" site?
I was wondering when chromate would amplify the signature line. Very nice!
Cheers, I plan to give each of the sites a separate design (eventually) and I've gotta build a new user friendly pagination thing. I also have a problem with Amazon returning stock that has been discontinued. No use to anybody. I would like to filter them out, but don't know how yet.
Those are real nice sites chromate, love the designs! You base it on sitepoint at all?
I have an idea on this issue, but it would give an uneven number of results back from a list (like displaying only 7 or 8 items) depending if a result was filtered out.Quote:
Originally posted by chromate
I also have a problem with Amazon returning stock that has been discontinued. No use to anybody. I would like to filter them out, but don't know how yet.
If it's discontinued, it says so in "Availability", right?
Mike, you think they're similar? I suppose they are quite like sitepoint. I hadn't based it on sitepoint, no. I hadn't even thought about it until you bought it up :)
I was just aiming to pick "generic" colours that I could use with a load of sites temporarily. I originally started doing a PDA reviews type site, so the colours are a little "techy" but then I decided against that idea because the competition with keywords that have anything to do with PDA's is too strong. I thought the kitchen stuff would compliment the carbohydrate counter / weight loss side of things. Once you have the script written, they're so easy to create. I'll just see how things go with them.
Yeah, I can knock them out of the results that are displayed to the user by checking each record returned, then if it's discontinued, I don't display it. But like you say, the pages then have different numbers of items each time. Some of the pages sometimes don't have ANY items, if I'm filtering. So I had to get rid of *my* own filter. I was just wondering if there was a AWS filter that would do it. Haven't had time to really look into it yet and on the face if it, it seems there isn't.Quote:
Originally posted by GCT13
I have an idea on this issue, but it would give an uneven number of results back from a list (like displaying only 7 or 8 items) depending if a result was filtered out.
If it's discontinued, it says so in "Availability", right?
Didn't realize it was that bad for some categories. That's bad. :confused:Quote:
Originally posted by chromate
Some of the pages sometimes don't have ANY items, if I'm filtering. So I had to get rid of *my* own filter.
Yeah, they are really easy to create. I'm hoping to launch one in January. The script is written, just have to do a design:)Quote:
Originally posted by chromate
Mike, you think they're similar? I suppose they are quite like sitepoint. I hadn't based it on sitepoint, no. I hadn't even thought about it until you bought it up :)
I was just aiming to pick "generic" colours that I could use with a load of sites temporarily. I originally started doing a PDA reviews type site, so the colours are a little "techy" but then I decided against that idea because the competition with keywords that have anything to do with PDA's is too strong. I thought the kitchen stuff would compliment the carbohydrate counter / weight loss side of things. Once you have the script written, they're so easy to create. I'll just see how things go with them.
what category are you doing? I figure WP can get the whole of Amazon covered and then we can compare notes :)
WO WO WO... How do you create one of these sites?
You need to know a scripting language and then look in Amazon's associate section for Amazon Web Services. You can then download a kit with examples etc.
Can't tell you at the moment:) Hopefully, I should get it done in the first week of January.Quote:
Originally posted by chromate
what category are you doing? I figure WP can get the whole of Amazon covered and then we can compare notes :)
Quote:
Originally posted by chromate
You need to know a scripting language and then look in Amazon's associate section for Amazon Web Services. You can then download a kit with examples etc.
Will PHP do?
Yes, that's what I use.
My site will as well.
And will the pages be search engine friendly?
You better believe it.
SE-friendly URLs is independant of PHP (or whatever scripting language you're using), it's about working with the .htaccess file if you're running under an Apache server.
The amazon script I'm using is in PHP, so the pages will be easy to be made into se friendly ones.
Yep, PHP's fine.
Sean's Lingerie Shop... Perhaps I could actually stock the stuff myself, I found 12 sets of lace Lingerie for £5, unworn, brand new, on ebay wholesale...