e-commerce seo challenges of https

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e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS 08/18/2016 Dirk Lester · SEO Consultant · Dunn Solutions

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Page 1: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Name · Title · Dunn Solutions08/18/2016Dirk Lester · SEO Consultant · Dunn Solutions

Page 2: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Today’s Agenda

Page 3: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Dunn Solutions is a full-service IT consulting firmfounded in 1988

Raleigh, NCDelivery Training

Bangalore, IndiaDelivery

MinneapolisDelivery Training

ChicagoDelivery

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Practice Areas

Application

Development• Portals

• eCommerce &

Content Managed

Websites

• Mobile App

Development

• Custom App

Development

• Search Engine

Optimization

Training

• Certified

SAP/Liferay

• Classroom, On-

site, Computer

Based & Virtual

• Mentoring &

Custom Training

Frameworks

• Accountable Care

Orgs (ACO’s)

• Corporate Legal

• Higher Education

• Optical Shop

Solutions

Analytics

• Analytics & BI

Platforms

• Data Warehouse

& Data

Integration

Predictive

Analytics

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Application Development Practice

• Innovation

• Collaboration

• Customer

• Responsive Design

• Enterprise

eCommerce

Solutions

• Custom Software

• Custom Off-the-Shelf

• Assurity™

Methodology

• Business

• Consumer

• iOS, Android,

Windows

Portals

Custom Application

Development

e-Commerce & Content

Managed Websites

Mobile Application

Development

Page 6: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Analytics Practice

Business Intelligence

Big Data

Data IntegrationBusiness Analytics

Data Warehousing

• KPI’s and Metrics

• Dashboards

• Data Exploration and

Visualization

• Ad Hoc Analysis &

Reporting

• Data Mining

• Predictive Analytics

• Prescriptive Analytics

• R, AzureML

• Hadoop, MapReduce

• AWS and Azure

• Hive, Sqoop, Spark

• NoSQL

• Data Lake

• Columnar

• In-memory

• EIM (Data Integration

and Data Quality

• Dimensional Modeling

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Search Engine Optimization Services

Initial Services

• Competitor Research

• Search Domain Audit

• Keyword Targeting

• SERP Landscape

Analysis

• Keyword Target

Recommendations

On-Going Services

• Site Architecture Optimization

• Technical On-page/Off-page

Optimization

• Digital Content Optimization

• Social Link Building

• Monthly Site Traffic, Rankings

and SERPs Reporting

Competitive

Audit

Strategic

Diagnosis

Tactical

Optimization

Tactical Adjustment

Google Algorithm

Shakeup

Tactical Adjustment

Strategic Results

Review

Page 9: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Selected Clients

Page 10: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Today’s Agenda

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What is HTTP and what is HTTPS

HTTP stands for HyperText Transfer Protocol, it’s a simple way to send and receive text based messages

and it’s the most frequently used protocol on the web. It’s the kind technology that’s invisible because it’s

ubiquitous. Similarly, HTTPS stands for HyperText Transfer Protocol Secure. It’s the same protocol as HTTP,

but the text is encrypted using Transport Layer Security (SSL). So when you see HTTP in your browser’s

address bar it’s unencrypted and when you see HTTPS the connection from your customer and your

website is encrypted. Migrating to HTTPS and installing the SSL certificate that requires won’t change the

look of your site. But visitors will see their browser bar status change to indicate that your site is an HTTPS.

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What Are the Benefits of HTTPS vs HTTP

It's so rare for Google to reveal its actual ranking factors that figuring out what they are is a

profession, so in 2014 when Google announced they’d be rewarding websites using HTTPS

encryption with higher search results it was surprising. But as rankings factors go, Implementing

HTTPS entails a few risks and some cost. Webmasters balance them out with benefits including:

More Referral Traffic Data

Using HTTPS Will Be a Rankings Boost

Gives You a Security and Privacy Boost

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More Referral Traffic Data

Most e-commerce sites use a setup where visitors shop on HTTP and checkout on HTTPS. But

when traffic passes from a non-secure HTTP website to a secure HTTPS website, the referral

traffic data is stripped away. The traffic shows up in Google Analytics as 'Direct.' Which is a

problem because you can never quite tell where your most valuable traffic is actually coming

from. But once you have an all HTTPS site, all of your referral traffic information is preserved.

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Using HTTPS Will Be a Rankings Boost

It’s been almost exactly two years since Google

introduced a real time rankings signal designed

to encourage site owners to migrate their

websites from HTTP to HTTPS that gave HTTPS

websites a comparatively small rankings boost.

When it was first rolled out it seemed to function

on a one vs one basis. Which just means that

whenever the algorithm had to decide between

two websites competing for the same position, it

would award the higher ranking to the HTTP site.

That said, just this week, we’ve actually seen a

fairly sharp uptick in the Google rankings of

HTTPS sites, indicating that they’ve cranked up

the importance of the signal. When asked,

Google said they hadn’t tweaked the HTTPS

ranking boost but that “no” usually means they

have.

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Gives You a Security and Privacy Boost

If you’ve had any exposure to this topic, you’ve probably heard that HTTPS can only offer you an

advantage if your website uses sensitive passwords. But that isn’t really true. But even average

everyday, non-commerce sites, can benefit from HTTPS privacy and security in the following ways:

• HTTPS ensures that the website is the one the server it is supposed to be talking to

• HTTPS prevents Man-in-the-middle hacking, making your website more secure

• HTTPS encrypts communications, including URLs, so it protects visitor browsing history

and credit card numbers

Page 16: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

SEO Best Practices for HTTPS Migration

You don’t need to be concerned when switching from your site from HTTP to HTTPS for the rankings boost.

Google was telling webmasters that it was safe to do so for years before their 2014 rankings announcement.

Unfortunately hat doesn’t mean that you won’t need to properly communicate to Google that you’ve

movedyour site fromHTTP to HTTPS and take these two steps to ensure yourwebsite’s trafficdoesn’t suffer.

Use Relative URLs for resources that reside on the same secure domain

Decide the kind of SSL certificate you need, single, use 2048-bit certificates and keep it up to

date

Page 17: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Use Relative URLs in Your Internal Links

There are two types of URLs that can be used in

internal links, Absolute and Relative. With an

absolute URL, you include the entire web

address of any page that you’re linking to in the

link. You literally hard-code your full domain, in

each and every link, http//www.site.com/topic.

That's using an absolute URL. Which presents

an obvious problem in the context of an HTTP

to HTTPS migration. Fortunately it’s possible to

code internal links as relative URLs instead. A

relative URL is just /topic. Essentially what that

does is rely on a visitor’s web browser to

assume that: This link is pointing to a page on

the same site we're on so I’m just going to go

there. So using Relative URLs simplifies your

redirects needs.

Page 18: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Use The Right, Up to Date, SSL Certificate

First, what is an SSL certificate? An SSL certificate is a digital public document that ensures that visitors

access the site they want to visit by demonstrating ownership. If you’re an e-commerce site owner, an SSL

prevents third party attackers from impersonating their website. For your customers, your SSL certificate

will establish a secure connection between their web browser and your site that protects information like

passwords and credit card details by adding a layer of encryption when their data is sent back and forth.

Use 2048-bit key certificates

SSL Certificatesare time sensitive, you’llneed to keep yours up to date or risk the above result

There are single, multi-domain and wildcard certificates, so you’ll need to get one that matches

your needs

Page 19: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

SEO Challenges to Overcome with HTTPS

The main SEO issues we typically see after HTTP to HTTPS

migrations result from site owners neglecting to set the

HTTPS site as the preferred version and leaving the HTTP

version live. Because doing so means that there are as

many as four versions of a site online and that can result in:

Duplicate Content Penalties

Back Link Dilution

Search Engine Crawl BudgetWastage

Page 20: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Duplicate Content?

What do we mean by Duplicate Content? Well, onsite duplicate content refers to content that appears on

two or more pages of your website. Now, the best way to get into why duplicate content is bad is to explain

why unique content is good. It works like this: Having unique content sets you site apart. If you’re using the

same copy to describe your services as your competitors, Google has no basis to give your site a rankings

advantage. Having the same word for word text on a WWW and a non-WWW URL or an HTTP and an

HTTPS URL or all four URLs, diminishes the value of your content. Google doesn’t want to offer multiple

pages that repeat one another in results, so the algorithm looks for content that’s unique between competitors.

Page 21: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Backlink Dilution?

Google ranks your website based on two categories of factors. On Page factors, meaning your site’s

code + content and Off Page factors that vary but pretty much all boil down to Back Links. Which

means that basically every time someone links to your website by bookmarking it on del.icio.us or

sharing it onto their LinkedIn feed, Google gives you points for it. Unfortunately, having two or four

versions of site live means that different users will come across the different versions then share and

link accordingly. So the points for the links will be divided between two or four URLs rather than one.

Page 22: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Search Engine Crawl Budget?

There are three things to understand here. First, your site’s “Crawl Budget” equals the number of

URLs Google will crawl each time it visits. Second, Google ranks your site based on what it crawls so

the more it crawls the better your rankings will tend to be. Third in the same way that having

multiple versions of URLs after and HTTP to HTTPS migration can result in Link Dilution, it can dilute

your Crawl Budget. So having two versions of your site live will cut your Crawl Budget in half and

having four can turn 100 crawls per visit into 25 per, and that will impact you rankings proportionally.

Page 23: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Fixing For Your Post HTTPS Migration SEO Issues

Despite how often we encounter e-commerce websites suffering from particularly acute forms of all three

issues post HTTP to HTTPS migration, the tactics we employ to clean up the mistakes that caused them are all

on the technical side—which transplanted from SEO guy Greek means they’re all relatively easy to implement.

Deploy Canonical Tags Aimed at One HTTPS URL

Validate One HTTPS URL in Google Search Console and Bing Webmaster Tools

Use 301 Redirects to Aim Your Old HTTP URLs at your new HTTPS URLs

Update YourWebsite’s Robots.txt File and XML Sitemap with your new HTTPS URLs

Point External Links from Social Profiles and Local/Map Listings at Your HTTPS URLs

Page 24: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Deploy Canonical Tags Aimed at One HTTPS URL

Canonicalization may sound like it’s a training course for handling especially large projectile

weapons, but it’s actually a pretty important aspect of organic search engine optimization.

Getting canonicalization right will mean that Google will crawl more pages on your website;

it will consolidate PageRank and Link Authority and PageRank, which will give your site a

stronger backlink profile. It will also mean fewer broken links from other websites. Getting

canonicalization wrong (in the way Ricoh did in the image above) will mean the exact opposite.

Page 25: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Google Search Console and Bing Webmaster Validation

It may seem like I’m needlessly repeating myself here, but it is very important to understand that

http://site.com, http://www.site.com, https://site.com and https://www.site.com are really FOUR

different websites. So you’ll need to ensure that the HTTPS version of your website gets added to

both Google Search Console and Bing Webmaster Tools. And that in Google Search Console, you add

both the www and non-wwwversions. Then makeone of the HTTPS versions your preferred domain.

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301 Redirect Your HTTP URLs to Your New HTTPS

Customer Name / 26

Many of the issues we’re seeing post HTTP to HTTPS

migration boil down to do with redirects. And that’s

because the change can be done at the registrar level, in

the server config, or even in a .htaccess file; all of which

have their own pitfalls. For instance, Apache servers use

302 redirects by default. Unfortunately, a 302 signals

the kind of “temporary” redirect you might use on your

site for an out of stock product. But a site migration

requires a 301 “permanently moved” redirect. So as

you go through and do your redirects, you’ll want to be

sure to check subpages, as well as the home page;

depending on how your site’s rules are written and

where they are placed, these can affect the redirects

differently. You’ll want to take a look at your URL’s status

codes and hops, not just whether or not they land on

the correct page to be sure things are working correctly.

Page 27: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Update Your Robots.txt File and XML Sitemap

I’ll start by defining my terms here. First,

robots.txt files are used by websites to

communicate with web spiders, to tell robots

which areas of your website shouldn’t be

indexed or displayed in search results—for

instance, the URLs where you login to its

backend. They also typically contain a link to

the location of your XML sitemap. So second,

an XML sitemap is a document submitted to

search engines that gives spiders a map of

your URLs, images and videos.

So obviously when migrate to a secure site

you’ll want to make sure that you update

both and re-submit your sitemap via Google

Search Console and Bing Webmaster Tools.

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Point External Links at Your HTTPS URLs

Finally, you might that because your site is 301 redirecting your old non-secure

URLs to your new, search-friendly, secure URLs but that’s a less than ideal situation

in one instance … Your Back Links. You’ll recall that each back link pointed at your

website is worth a certain number of points toward your search rankings. Well,

when you use a 301 redirect you lose 15% of those points. So even though you

can never change them all, it’s worth your time to change the links back to your

site that you control, your branded social profiles and local search listings,manually.

Page 29: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

- Unknown

“The best place to hide a dead

body is page 3 of Google

search results.”

Page 30: e-Commerce SEO Challenges of HTTPS

Dirk Lester · SEO Consultant ·

Dunn Solutions

[email protected]

Questions & Answers