Several months ago, Google launched the Google EMD Update that went after "low-quality exact-match domains in search results," according to Google's head of search spam, Matt Cutts.
Since
then, I've been watching the EMDers struggle to find a solution. Some
have decided to stick with their exact match domains (EMDs) and build up
quality on the site. Some have decided to stick with their "low
quality" (i.e. not change the site) but switch to a new domain name, a
non-EMD. Some have decided to do both, switch to a non-EMD and also
build quality.
What works?
One person said in the ongoing WebmasterWorld
thread that some of his EMDs recovered in the past couple months and he
did nothing. He didn't improve the sites, he didn't switch the domain
names to a non EMD. He just waited and waited and maybe Google's EMD
algorithm was down-shifted a bit.
Tedster, WebmasterWorld's
administrator said in response to a question on why would switching to a
non EMD domain help a "low quality" site?
Because
Google's final EMD algorithm was a bit heavy-handed on the edge cases?
They tried to get it balanced through, what, something like 3 updates?
So some people's sites have something good going that isn't just EMD
keyword matching, but possibly this last EMD update trivialized that.
But
others are fed up waiting and have decided to take action. It seems
for the most part, those who have tried to upgrade the quality did not
see an upgrade in rankings but those who have switched off to a non-EMD
have noticed an upgrade in ranking.
Pete Hall, a webmaster with an EMD said:
Changed
mine yesterday and gone from position 360 to 12 in just over 24 hours.
Yes we re-designed the site last year but none of this made any
difference, in fact after January things got worse.
I am still watching the thread but for anyone suffering from the EMD update, it is worth a read.
Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.
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