Glossary

Duplicate Content

Substantially similar content appearing on multiple URLs. Confuses search engines about which version to rank. Fix it with canonical tags, redirects, or by consolidating pages.

Why It Matters

Duplicate content doesn't trigger a "penalty" in the traditional sense - Google won't manually punish your site for it. But it does cause problems. When the same content exists at multiple URLs, Google has to choose which version to index and rank. It splits crawl budget, dilutes ranking signals, and often picks the wrong version.

Duplicate content is also far more common than most people realise. URL parameters, session IDs, print-friendly versions, HTTP vs HTTPS, trailing slashes - all of these can silently create duplicates.

In Practice

Audit your site for duplicates using Screaming Frog or Sitebulb. Look for pages with identical or near-identical content at different URLs.

Fix duplicates with the right tool: canonical tags for URL parameter variants, 301 redirects for old URLs that should point to new ones, and content consolidation for pages that genuinely compete with each other.

Set up proper URL standardisation from the start. Pick HTTPS, pick www or non-www, handle trailing slashes consistently, and redirect all variants to your canonical format.

Common Mistakes

Ignoring URL parameter duplicates. Using 302 redirects instead of 301s for permanently moved pages. Having both HTTP and HTTPS versions live without redirects. Creating separate pages for topics that should be consolidated.

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