Data from Intelligent Positioning shows that the airline implemented a URL restructure during March and April, but has failed to correctly redirect the old pages.

As a result Google is still picking up old 404 URLs, which is having a catastrophic impact on Ryanair’s search rankings.

This chart shows how the situation has changed between March 6 and April 6 2014. The columns on the left show the original ranking and the URL for the various search terms, while the columns on the right show the new ranking and URLs as of April 6.

Click to enlarge image

Many of the URLs have been altered to include additional text such as ‘cheap flights’ or, more bizarrely, ‘index.php’.

404s

As a result of the restructure, many of Ryanair’s search results now return 404 pages. This means that it will likely face further penalties when Google realises that it is returning useless results.

In fact this is likely to already be occurring, as according to Intelligent Positioning’s data the airline’s search result for ‘Romania flights’ had fallen to 53rd place due to the fact that it returned a 404 page, but when I searched for it on April 15 Ryanair didn’t appear at all.

Similarly, when I searched for ‘flights to Poland’ Ryanair didn’t appear until page four, which is far lower than it appeared when the analysis took place around 10 days ago.

Another problem is that the search result linked to a page that gave details for a random flight from Bristol to Wroclaw rather than any sort of hub page for travel to Poland.

The impact on Ryanair

Data published by SimilarWeb in June 2013 showed that Ryanair’s site received more monthly traffic that British Airways and easyJet combined.

British Airways and easyJet showed a more stable line throughout the year, with a more consistent flow of web visitors, however Ryanair’s lowest traffic point (December) was still bigger than easyJet’s busiest period in July.

We obviously can’t tell which search terms are most valuable for Ryanair, but it’s clear that its current drop in search rankings will have a major impact on its site traffic.

It’s safe to assume that Ryanair’s SEOs are aware of the issue, but as yet it seems that nothing has been done to remedy it, so we’ll have to wait and see how long it takes for the airline to improve its rankings.