I have looked and searched (with Google) but can't seem to find anyone else asking this question - is there a way to turn off a Page the way products, categories and ReadyTheme components can be? Google has started barked about pages that have redirects and after so long a time it would be nice to just turn the page off (but keep it for historical reference).
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Leslie Kirk
Miva Certified Developer
Miva Merchant Specialist since 1997
Previously of Webs Your Way (aka Leslie Nord leslienord)
Email me: [email protected]
www.lesliekirk.com
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Another idea is to just redirect it to another page.Bruce Golub
Phosphor Media - "Your Success is our Business"
Improve Your Customer Service | Get MORE Customers | Edit CSS/Javascript/HTML Easily | Make Your Site Faster | Get Indexed by Google | Free Modules | Follow Us on Facebook
phosphormedia.com
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Originally posted by Bruce - PhosphorMedia View PostAnother idea is to just redirect it to another page.Leslie Kirk
Miva Certified Developer
Miva Merchant Specialist since 1997
Previously of Webs Your Way (aka Leslie Nord leslienord)
Email me: [email protected]
www.lesliekirk.com
Follow me: Twitter | Facebook | FourSquare | Pinterest | Flickr
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Originally posted by lesliekirk View Post
Google is starting to bark about redirects.
[quote]
a page can't be "unpublished" like it can be in WordPress
[/qoute]
what happens when a user tries to navigate to an unpublished page in WordPress?
Bruce Golub
Phosphor Media - "Your Success is our Business"
Improve Your Customer Service | Get MORE Customers | Edit CSS/Javascript/HTML Easily | Make Your Site Faster | Get Indexed by Google | Free Modules | Follow Us on Facebook
phosphormedia.com
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Yeah you might want to check and clarify what they are barking about redirect wise.
Usually Google barks when there is a chain of multiple redirects.
Might want to check the urls in question and make sure to there aren't multiple redirects to get to a single page.
Check for hard coded links to old urls as well.
Tools like or similar to SEMRush are great for identifying stuff like this.Nick Harkins
www.loveisarose.com
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Originally posted by SidFeyDesigns View PostYeah you might want to check and clarify what they are barking about redirect wise.
Usually Google barks when there is a chain of multiple redirects.
Might want to check the urls in question and make sure to there aren't multiple redirects to get to a single page.
Check for hard coded links to old urls as well.
Tools like or similar to SEMRush are great for identifying stuff like this.
So I had to dig around to understand why all these links were not indexed
Redirected pages will not be indexed but the pages where they redirect to will.
I still need to find the other reason I found because it made it sound more like Google didn't like redirects because they could mislead the visitor.
Leslie Kirk
Miva Certified Developer
Miva Merchant Specialist since 1997
Previously of Webs Your Way (aka Leslie Nord leslienord)
Email me: [email protected]
www.lesliekirk.com
Follow me: Twitter | Facebook | FourSquare | Pinterest | Flickr
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Leslie, you might want to consider adding those pages to your robots.txt with a "disallow" entry. Then, manually request for Google to update, there use to be a feature for that, don't recall if its still available.Last edited by William Davis; 10-01-22, 08:11 AM.Thank you, Bill Davis
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lesliekirk Is it just the 1 page in question or is Google barking about more than that?
If its more pages causing issues perhaps it might be worth seeing if they can unblock SEMRush temporarily and set up a site audit and run a crawl.
It could prevent a big headache in pinpointing the major issues.
Another option would be to use Google's URL inspection tool in Google Search Console if they have Google Search Console set up and properly verified.
As I'm sure you know, there are a lot of reasons google may choose not to index a page such as duplicate content, improper canonicals, etc. and a site audit or URL inspection should help make the issues more clear.Nick Harkins
www.loveisarose.com
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Originally posted by William Davis View PostLeslie, you might want to consider adding those pages to your robots.txt with a "disallow" entry. Then, manually request for Google to update, there use to be a feature for that, don't recall if its still available.
Any who, Google is now letting you know if you have any links with redirects. It may wind up being helpful so that you can go back and start deleting all those old redirected items because hopefully Google has finally found the new ones.
FYI - SidFeyDesigns - I'm a huge fan of ScreamingFrog.Leslie Kirk
Miva Certified Developer
Miva Merchant Specialist since 1997
Previously of Webs Your Way (aka Leslie Nord leslienord)
Email me: [email protected]
www.lesliekirk.com
Follow me: Twitter | Facebook | FourSquare | Pinterest | Flickr
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The only reason to deactivate or delete old cats and products that have a redirect, is so MIVA search can't find them. Since Miva doesn't search pages....that's not necessary.
Bruce Golub
Phosphor Media - "Your Success is our Business"
Improve Your Customer Service | Get MORE Customers | Edit CSS/Javascript/HTML Easily | Make Your Site Faster | Get Indexed by Google | Free Modules | Follow Us on Facebook
phosphormedia.com
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Originally posted by Bruce - PhosphorMedia View PostThe only reason to deactivate or delete old cats and products that have a redirect, is so MIVA search can't find them. Since Miva doesn't search pages....that's not necessary.Leslie Kirk
Miva Certified Developer
Miva Merchant Specialist since 1997
Previously of Webs Your Way (aka Leslie Nord leslienord)
Email me: [email protected]
www.lesliekirk.com
Follow me: Twitter | Facebook | FourSquare | Pinterest | Flickr
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lesliekirk I've heard good things about screaming frog but haven't tried it out yet.
Anytime you're redirecting a product or category it's best to delete it or make it inactive. You do not have to keep the old product or category in Miva. Either option will work and will keep the long url from being accessible.
For a page template you can assign the sitemap exclude item to the old page to keep it out of the XML sitemap. The redirect will keep the old url out of Google's index.
Once you finish deleting/deactivating categories/products or assigning the sitemap exclude item from the page templates, run the sitemap feed, double check the sitemap in your browser if you wish, and then submit it to Google. This will notify Google of the new url and help with getting it indexed a bit faster.Nick Harkins
www.loveisarose.com
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Originally posted by SidFeyDesigns View Postlesliekirk I've heard good things about screaming frog but haven't tried it out yet.
Anytime you're redirecting a product or category it's best to delete it or make it inactive. You do not have to keep the old product or category in Miva. Either option will work and will keep the long url from being accessible.
For a page template you can assign the sitemap exclude item to the old page to keep it out of the XML sitemap. The redirect will keep the old url out of Google's index.
Once you finish deleting/deactivating categories/products or assigning the sitemap exclude item from the page templates, run the sitemap feed, double check the sitemap in your browser if you wish, and then submit it to Google. This will notify Google of the new url and help with getting it indexed a bit faster.Leslie Kirk
Miva Certified Developer
Miva Merchant Specialist since 1997
Previously of Webs Your Way (aka Leslie Nord leslienord)
Email me: [email protected]
www.lesliekirk.com
Follow me: Twitter | Facebook | FourSquare | Pinterest | Flickr
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lesliekirk Haha I gotcha. Well hopefully it helps someone else that stumbles upon this thread then...Nick Harkins
www.loveisarose.com
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