Display of dell.com subdomains in the new organic research section.
Side note: Revealing and analyzing hidden subdomains is a very powerful feature. Last week I located a staging subdomain for a new client using SEMrush.
This subdomain is currently being deindexed and will soon be placed back where it belongs, after users log in:
New Organic Research - Corrupted Domains
Locating corrupt subdomains with SEMrush.
Back to Dell, if you check the root domain you thailand telegram group probably won't be able to tell exactly which parts perform better than others.
But if you take each of the subdomains of the root one by one, you can start to peel them off like a daisy.
As you delve deeper into this analysis, you can spot areas at risk, hazards, opportunities, and more.
As an example, this is what the root domain looks like.
The general trend is as follows:
On the contrary, the trend for the subdomain accessories.euro.dell.com would be like this.
Note the drop that occurs in spring 2018:
Analyzing the subdomain accessories.euro.dell.com we found a different behavior.
Digging deeper into the position changes shown by that subdomain, we find specific keywords and landing pages that lost positions during the spring.
Was this due to a technical error, was it expected, or was it the result of the algorithm updates in March and April ?
If you didn't have the ability to explore subdomains, we wouldn't have the full picture of the situation.
New Organic Research - Subdomain
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