we get more details on pricing
Posted: Thu Jan 30, 2025 9:47 am
Plus, , specs, and more.
This is a transactional page rather than an informational one, a clear part of the purchasing process.
The intention of these two pages is completely different.
The first is to help introduce the Macbook Pro and easily compare the different models available, while the second is to help people who are considering a purchase find the exact specifications they are looking for and start making their purchase.
These two pages can exist (and rank) alongside each other without causing any confusion for either users or search engines.
When multiple pages exist with the same intent, you have a cannibalization problem.
The most important thing to remember is that “multiple pages optimized for list of real mobile database the same keyword” is not cannibalization unless the intent of these pages is the same.
When this happens, you are competing with yourself.
In fact, Google’s John Mueller was asked on a Reddit Ask Me Anything a couple of years ago: “How does Google view keyword cannibalization? People believe that having multiple pages on the same topic confuses search engines and hurts their chances of ranking.”
John's response was:
We simply rank content as we get it. If you have a bunch of pages with pretty much the same content, they're going to compete with each other, like a bunch of kids trying to be first in line, and eventually, someone gets their head in
. Personally, I prefer a few strong pages over hundreds of weaker ones, don't dilute the value of your site.
This is a transactional page rather than an informational one, a clear part of the purchasing process.
The intention of these two pages is completely different.
The first is to help introduce the Macbook Pro and easily compare the different models available, while the second is to help people who are considering a purchase find the exact specifications they are looking for and start making their purchase.
These two pages can exist (and rank) alongside each other without causing any confusion for either users or search engines.
When multiple pages exist with the same intent, you have a cannibalization problem.
The most important thing to remember is that “multiple pages optimized for list of real mobile database the same keyword” is not cannibalization unless the intent of these pages is the same.
When this happens, you are competing with yourself.
In fact, Google’s John Mueller was asked on a Reddit Ask Me Anything a couple of years ago: “How does Google view keyword cannibalization? People believe that having multiple pages on the same topic confuses search engines and hurts their chances of ranking.”
John's response was:
We simply rank content as we get it. If you have a bunch of pages with pretty much the same content, they're going to compete with each other, like a bunch of kids trying to be first in line, and eventually, someone gets their head in
