I intentionally got a client penalized by Google. Here’s what I learned about recovering from algorithm updates.

Learning from a Bold SEO Experiment: How Intentional Site Deoptimization Can Lead to Long-Term Recovery

In the ever-evolving landscape of search engine optimization (SEO), strategies that defy conventional wisdom can sometimes offer surprising insights. Recently, I undertook a bold experiment involving a client whose website had been severely impacted by a Google core update. The goal was not merely to recover but to understand how deliberate deoptimization could facilitate long-term resilience and improved rankings.


The Situation: A Client in Crisis

The client approached me after experiencing a 73% drop in organic traffic—an alarming decline following a major Google core algorithm update. Their urgent request was to fix the issue quickly. Traditional SEO advice would suggest incremental improvements, but I chose a different path.

The Controversial Strategy: Intentional Site “Rebirth”

Understanding the site’s extensive history of SEO violations—riddled with keyword stuffing from 2012, a backlink profile contaminated with spam, doorway pages, and other toxic elements—I decided it was time for a complete overhaul. My unconventional approach was to expedite the process of cleaning up the site by intentionally “breaking” it purposefully, with the aim of rebuilding from a cleaner, stronger foundation.


The Actions Taken

1. Drastic Content Pruning

  • Deleted approximately 2,400 pages in a single day, leaving only about 340 high-quality pages.

2. Backlink Cleanup

  • Disavowed around 12,000 backlinks, focusing on removing harmful links.

3. Content Overhaul

  • Removed all overly optimized content that was chasing keywords with little regard for user experience.
  • Rewrote remaining content in plain, accessible language—eschewing SEO-centric copywriting.

4. Internal Linking Adjustments

  • Eliminated exact-match anchor text within internal links to reduce keyword cannibalization.

The Results: A Bumpy but Educational Journey

First 30 Days:
Organic traffic plummeted an additional 41%, prompting understandable concern from the client. I urged patience and emphasized the importance of trusting the process.

Day 45:
We began to see the first signs of recovery, albeit for different keywords than before—an indication that Google was re-evaluating the site’s relevance.

Day 90:
Traffic surpassed initial levels by 34%, attracting higher-quality visitors and experiencing better conversion rates.


Key Lessons Learned

1. Sometimes, the fastest recovery involves


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