05 Jun
Posted by Google Success as Google Ranking Tips, Google Search Engine, SEO Tips
Google uses two indexes for its search results. The normal index and the supplemental results index.  Unlike the main index, from which the top results of any query comes from, supplemental search results will only show up if there are very few or no results at all in the main index.
Google prevents questionable pages from being found in the main index by putting them in the supplemental index. Supplemental results are usually shown after the main search results. Pages in supplemental index are crawled less and not trusted by Google. As per Google’s definition of suppemental results
A supplemental result is just like a regular web result, except that it’s pulled from our supplemental index. We’re able to place fewer restraints on sites that we crawl for this supplemental index than we do on sites that are crawled for our main index. For example, the number of parameters in a URL might exclude a site from being crawled for inclusion in our main index; however, it could still be crawled and added to our supplemental index.
So if your pages end up in the supplemental index, it is very unlikely that your pages will show up in top ranked results for a query.Â
1. How to find out if your web pages are in the supplemental results?
An easy way to find out how many of your pages are listed in Google’s supplemental results is to search for the following phrase on Google.com
site:www.yoururl.com ***
and proceed to the last result pages to find the supplemental results. Supplemental results will be indicated as ’supplemental’ next to the URL.
2. What kind of pages end up in Google’s supplemental results?
Any of the following factors or a combination of them can cause your pages to be in
the supplemental index. Â
Keeping these factors in mind when creating pages will help you avoid getting them in the supplemental index. Very often we see that e-commerce sites with dynamically generated URLs with many parameters often get in the supplemental index.
3. How we can get these pages out of Google’s supplemental index ?
Get some new incoming linksut some fresh content on your pages. Google indexes supplemental pages less, so the backlinks may help.
Rewrite your page title and description tags so that they are descriptive and relevant to your site, taking care that they are not too long or contain repetitive keywords.
You may need to rewrite your PHP code for e-commerce websites using mod-rewrite to simplify the cryptic URLs and also add unique meta tgs to each page.
Â
Technorati Tags: Google, supplemental results, supplemental index, incoming links, backlinks
12 Responses
jason Y
December 9th, 2006 at 5:44 pm
1My site is relatively new, only about a month and a half. I have been waiting for the pages to be listed in Google Search. Today when I did a site: I finally see about 120 pages. But all the pages except the main home page are all supplemental results. The pages all have original content. The meta tags might be similar. Could this be a time issue? Google just put my pages into the supplemental bin first and will move them later?
AndrewM’s Musings » Blog Archive » Escaping Google’s Supplemental Dead Zone
December 24th, 2006 at 1:55 am
2[...]  The Google Success blog adds: •  Rewrite your page title and description tags so that they are descriptive and relevant to your site, taking care that they are not too long or contain repetitive keywords.   [...]
Randhir
July 27th, 2007 at 1:09 am
3Thansk for providing good idea about how to remove supplemental pages. But main issue with my site is that crawling rate of our site is fast but still it is in supplemental result. Please help me….
ruben
April 20th, 2008 at 1:12 pm
4My question is why the heck google is the only one that does this to other sites, how about their site? Have you ever checked the page rank of google vs yahoo ? do you think that’s the truth of their forumula. How can anyone say that google will always remain the top search. Not to be so mad, All I am saying is that your tips are great. Yes, if you wanna stick with google, make every single page as unique as possible and avoid title and description if two or more pages carry similar items but look the same. You can’t call a duplicate content even if you have just a few para that look similar. I think the first index page of your site should have as short description meta tag as possible and don’t use words that could be used in other pages inside your domain.
Very nice post, needs some more views.
Cheers!
Ruben
Ronnie
September 4th, 2009 at 8:23 pm
5Thanks for this informative post, I couldn’t figure out why all of my website pages become supplemental.
Can you please suggest about my website ranking once I change the long URLs into short ones ? Will Google continue to increase website ranking once its up to there requirements ?
Google Success
September 4th, 2009 at 9:36 pm
6Hi Ronnie,
Your site has only one page – and it is indexed already!
Ronnie
September 6th, 2009 at 9:22 pm
7Hello Google Success
Thanks for replying, actually I used very long URLs stuffed with keywords separated by dashes (-) and I noticed that my website pages got supplemental, I confirmed this by copying content from these pages and past on Google.com to see the whether my website appears on first position or not and I confirmed that the website doesn’t show on first page of SERPs.
Some one suggested my to take off all the pages and reload them with a new URL once those pages are removed from Google database.
Please suggest is it a good practice to do ?
Google Success
September 6th, 2009 at 11:25 pm
8Ronie,
If you are changing any URL names, make sure you use 301 redirect using htaccess to redirect old URLs to new URLs. Most of the times, pages go into supplemental index because of duplicate content across the site. Make sure your pages have unique text content and the metatags (Title, Description, Keywords) match the page content.
Ronnie
September 9th, 2009 at 12:21 am
9Thanks again Google Success!
I highly appreciate you helping me with my problem, if I can ever help you for any thing please do let me know.
you are absolutely right about the 301 permanent redirects, but the strategy I am playing is to take down all website pages and let Google crawl website without any internal pages. and with time crawled pages will be removed from Google index.
Please give me last opinion, do I need to use 301 redirect in this case or not.
God bless you !
Google Success
September 9th, 2009 at 2:40 am
10Hi Ronie, If the number of pages in your website are not in thousands, you better use 301 redirects. Please add your site to your Google webmaster central account. You will find if there are any crawling errors reported by Google.
Ronnie
September 9th, 2009 at 7:39 pm
11Hello Google Success!
While I was trying to implement 301 redirect of about 100 pages, a quick question pops up into my mind about the transfer of any negative/supplemental effects on new URL pages with the same old content that supplemental pages had?
Poonam Sud
October 1st, 2009 at 11:02 pm
12A basic thing for webmasters to deal with is the ‘URL Canonicalization’ by implementing both rel=canonical and 301 redirection to determine one version of your site; either the ‘www’ or the ‘non-www’
RSS feed for comments on this post · TrackBack URI
Leave a reply
SEO & Web Design
Categories
Archives
Links
Meta
Calendar
© 2005-2008 Google Success | SEO SEM Directory | Theme design by BloggingPro and Design Disease