Cannibalization

Cannibalization

In today’s episode of Whiteboard Friday, Tom Capper walks you through a problem many SEOs have faced: cannibalization. What is it, how do you identify it, and how can you fix it? Watch the episode to find out. The author’s views are entirely his or her own (excluding the unlikely event of hypnosis) and may not always reflect the views of Moz.

What is cannibalization?

When one site has two competing URLs and performs less well because of it

Classic cannibalization

The classic case of cannibalization is when two URLS appear at the same time, and they sort of supplant each other in the SERP.

Consolidate or differentiate?

If there should only be one page, combine the best of the content, pick the strongest URL in terms of backlinks and history, and redirect the other URL to this combined page that has the best content.

Less-obvious cases

Sometimes it’s less obvious though.

Quick Tip

Think about what other pieces exist that are essentially the same as this one.

Do we think we’re underperforming?

Do we have other examples of similar keywords where we only have one page, where we’re doing significantly better?

Do competing pages both appear?

Look for similar keywords that are less ambiguous in intent, e.g. “best burgers” and “buy burgers.”

Source

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