Should I migrate clients site to older established domain?
-
I have a new client who had a domain that was established in 2004. About six months ago they moved their site over to a new domain and redirected the old domain to the new one. Their pagerank on the new domain is 1, and I can not find any historical data on the older domain. Would it be beneficial to move the site back to the old domain assuming that it had a higher pagerank? And is there a way to find out what the pagerank of the old site was before the redirect?
-
Oh... argh. Yeah, that makes step one easy. In some cases meta refresh acts like a 301 (if it's set to 0 seconds), and in others it doesn't, and there isn't a lot of rhyme or reason. Get the page-by-page redirects running, and you may see a pretty quick positive impact.
-
I initially that is what I was told by the webmaster. After running my own analysis it appears that they had a meta refresh.
-
I'm slightly confused - I thought you said the 301-redirects already were page level.
-
Thanks for all the help guys. I think I am going to use the new website and on the old domain use page level 301 redirects. Although the old page had a higher pr rank the new page is branded with the companies name. I am hoping with the redirects in place that the new site will catch up with the old ones PR eventually. Thoughts?
-
send Dr. Pete the information that I gave you in the PDFs after running it through all this it different tools showing what links go to which domains and I bet he will have a handle on it in no time.
All the best guys,
Tom
-
Ignoring toolbar PageRank (which can be very unreliable), have rankings and/or traffic fallen? What does DA/PA look like in our numbers? It's entirely possible the domain change was just a coincidence, but without historical data to compare to, it can be very tough to tell.
-
1. Yes I have verified as such.
2. It is redirected on a page by page basis.
3. The new page is the same as the old page with some additions here and there over the past three months.
4. I haven't seen any signs of bad links.
-
Did you happen to get my private message? I believe you are new site is going to blossom. However the tool you and I have both been looking for is been here the entire time.
http://www.seomoz.org/toolbox/pagerank
Please have a chance to read my reply in private message I hope it will be of help to you. Sincerely,
Thomas
-
I apologize the confusion was most likely on my side.
So the company had a domain that they were not happy with for around 9 years?
they purchased a brand-new domain from a registrar?
they move their site 6 months ago to this new domain because they preferred the name over the previous domain.
I agree nothing shady at all please excuse my last comments. Have to stop replying using a cell phone.
are you comfortable sharing that domain name? Either in a private message or in this form?
I would use tools like majesticSEO to determine the link profile of the older domain. then compared directly to the new domain if there is a huge discrepancy in the amount of relevant links I would say you are losing quite a bit.
Did you or did they to any 301 redirecting all? The reason I ask is that never hurts to ask this.
there is a plethora of tools out there that might be able to figure out what your previous page rank was however unless you had a lot of negative links or some sort of penalty going on with your older domain I would imagine it being much higher than a page rank 1.
If you did not do the 301 redirects as they are supposed to have been done and Dr. Pete has done great job of listing what needs to be answered.
"Fast forward to present day where I have taken over the account."
Did you take over this account less than 6 months ago or just recently?
if that's the case you may not really know what happened I'm assuming that makes this a lot more difficult considering if you are not there how would you know?
Do you know who did make the changes if you did not?
if so can you contact this person?
have you tried looking at your compared to your new domains traffic using compete or Alexa?
just to give you an idea of what's going on I would base it on majesticSEO's capability of showing you the history of your old domains back link profile. Obviously if there are quite a few more relevant domains pointing to your older domain comparison to your new domain that is going to make a big difference.
I would also of course look at the traffic using the tools I've mentioned above. I would also contact owner and asked them for a neat Google analytics data that you can get your hands on.
Sorry for my confusion earlier. I hope this will help you. And I would love to know the answers to these questions as well. If you would be kind enough to either paste the domain here or private message me at I would be more than happy to look those things up myself.
Sincerely,
Thomas
-
So, just to be sure: Six months ago, they 301-redirect the old domain to the new domain, correct? A couple of questions:
(1) Have you verified that this is a single-hop 301-redirect using 3rd-party header checkers? In other words, make sure it's working the way they think it's working. I don't say that to be condescending, but because I've seen it screwed up many, many times.
(2) Did they redirect on a page-by-page basis, or did everything just go to the new home-page? Are there potentially pages that got left out?
(3) Is the new page topically relevant to the old page (sounds like they're the same company)?
(4) Is there any sign of bad links on the old domain? Sometimes, links that didn't impact a domain after a long time can cause problems after a redirect.
-
Maybe I did not explain it correctly. My client has a company that has been around since 2004 with the same domain name. The simply bought a NEW domain(not existing from an auction) because they wanted to change their domain name. They moved their site 6 months ago to the brand new domain and pointed their old site to the new domain. Nothing shady happened here just a company wanting to change their domain name.
Fast forward to present day where I have taken over the account. There pr is 1on the new domain. As far as I know I can not determine what their page rank was on the old domain, but I assuming that it was probably higher than 1 because they have been using it for over 9 years and were getting about 10000 hits a month. I am wondering if it would be beneficial to move their site back to the old domain assuming it HAD a higher pr.
-
The domain that was purchased afterwards is going to rank just as your site is equal to whatever Google thinks it is equal to. They're not going to give you credit they know where the Site was that its been re Whois & reindex google knows exactly what's happened they know that who is has changed. And they probably even know that it's been doing auction. So if builder domain had links that were relevant to your site you might benefit from those. However if not you will not benefit from them they will hurt you. In the end unless you bought a domain because you needed it and it was a branding issue Google will most likely started back at zero it won't Happen right away but it Will not benefit you to buy a domain just because it is older and then reindex it and change this who is an think Google is going to give you credit. Those days are sadly over but at least you can get the domain you want I hope that's why you bought it why did you buy if you don't mind me asking?
Wow okay first off start off by looking at the new domain the older new domain and tell me the link profile using the http://www.opensiteexplorer.org/ here if you see any shady links that would We're not on the prior domain that would be a good indication that you've purchased a domain that is not any good. I personally think that purchasing hi PR Domains and trying to move them is coming to a end. However it can be done but it's on the very shady side of things and I would advise against it. On how would you know that it has never been penalized?
What was the prior page rank of the website before you moved it to the older domain that it is on now?
More importantly what was the Moz trust rank?
It seems that this is a fairly new website. And page rank of one or two should be expected for a short while. Google's not Just going to give you credit because you purchased a domain and then put 100% new content on it they know what happened. The only way I can see it working is if you actually purchased a hi rank real website keep Everything the same even the whois in the other person's name even then I would advise strongly against doing that.
Today you have to earn your way to the top of Google
please tell me about the frist Domains rank page rank and Moz rank did it suffer when it moved? I would advise against moving domains back-and-forth extremely strongly in less it has a very high page rank which would probably be diminished because of what's occurred. don't know how old this is a call if you give me some of that information I can give you some more advice.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Moving Shopify from a Sub Domain to the Full Domain
Apologies if this has been asked before. Currently we have a Shopify shop on a subdomain shop.lucybee.com a blog on subdomain blog.lucybee.com and the full domain of course. We'd now like to move everything onto Shopify on the full domain. Therefore the blog rolls into Shopify. We'll manually move pages into Shopify. Any advice or links to resources on how to manage would be gratefully received. Thank you , Jim
Technical SEO | | LucyBee0 -
301 Domain Redirect And Old Domain to a New one including pages
Hi, I need to 301 an old domain to a new one (new website) I need to 301 the domain to a new page not the new domain direct for example www.olddomain.co.uk to www.newdomain.co.uk/pagenew Then I need to also 301 all the other pages on the old domain to the new one for example... www.oldmain.co.uk/oldpage to www.newdomain.co.uk/newpage Issue is I can do one or the other not both, I can get the other pages to redirect but then the main domain wont redirect to the correct new page. Or I can get the old domain to redirect but not the internal pages. Thanks
Technical SEO | | David-Sharpe0 -
How can you promote a sub-domain ahead of a domain on the SERPs?
I have a new client that wants to promote their subdomain uk.imagemcs.com and have their main domain imagemcs.com fall off the SERPs. Objective? Get uk.imagemcs.com to rank first for UK 'brand' searches. Do a search for 'imagem creative services' and you should see the issue (it looks like rules have been applied to the robots.txt on the main domain to exclude any bots from crawling - but since they've been indexed previously I need to take action as it doesn't look great!). I think I can do this by applying a permanent redirect from the main domain to the subdomain at domain level and then no-indexing the site - and then resubmit the sitemap. My slight concern is that this no-indexing of the main domain may impact on the visibility of the subdomains (I'm dealing with uk.imagemcs.com, but there is us.imagemcs.com and de.imagemcs.com) and was looking for some assurance that this would not be the case. My understanding is that subdomains are completely distinct from domains and as such this action should have no impact on the subdomains. I asked the question on the Webmasters Forum but haven't really got anywhere
Technical SEO | | nathangdavidson2
https://productforums.google.com/forum/#!msg/webmasters/1Avupy3Uw_o/hu6oLQntCAAJ Can anyone suggest a course of action? many thanks, Nathan0 -
Site Not Being Indexed
Hey Everyone - I have a site that is being treated strangely by google (at least strange to me) The site has 24 pages in the sitemap - submitted to WMT'S over 30 days ago I've manually triggered google to crawl the homepage and all connecting links as well and submitted a couple individually. Google has been parked the indexing at 14 of the 24 pages. None of the unindexed URL's have Noindex or follow tags on them - they are clearly and easily linked to from other places on the site. The site is a brand new domain, has no manual penalty history and in my research has no reason to be considered spammy. 100% unique handwritten content I cannot figure out why google isn't indexing these pages. Has anyone encountered this before? Know any solutions? Thanks in advance.
Technical SEO | | CRO_first0 -
Is it problematic for Google when the site of a subdomain is on a different host than the site of the primary domain?
The Website on the subdomain runs on a different server (host) than the site on the main domain.
Technical SEO | | Christian_Campusjaeger0 -
301'd site, but new site is not getting picked up in google.
Hi I'm having big issues! Any help would be greatly appreciated This is the 3rd time this happened. Every time I switch my old site greatcleanjokes.com to the new design of chokeonajoke.com traffic goes almost completely down (I even tried out the new design on greatcleanjokes [to see if it was a 301 issue] and traffic also went down.) What can possibly be wrong with this new site that google just doesn't like it ?! I was ranking high up for many big phrase like joke of the day, corny jokes, clean jokes, short jokes. Now It's all gone. I also think it's strange that when I search for site:chokeonajoke.com the post pages show up before the category pages!? Here is the old site http://web.archive.org/web/20140406214615/http://www.greatcleanjokes.com/ Here is the new one http://chokeonajoke.com/ If you can't figure out anything do you know of anyone I can hire who may be able to figure it out?
Technical SEO | | Nickys22111 -
New site: More pages for usability, or fewer more detailed pages for greater domain authority flow?
Ladies and gents! We're building a new site. We have a list of 28 professions, and we're wondering whether or not to include them all on one long and detailed page, or to keep them on their own separate pages. Thinking about the flow of domain authority - I could see 28 pages diluting it quite heavily - but at the same time, I think having the separate pages would be better for the user. What do you think?
Technical SEO | | Muhammad-Isap1 -
Multiple Domains for One Site
We are building a site for a new miniature golf course. They have a long name, which they don't want me to mention, but it's equivalent to a name like Golden State Golf and Putt. They also have a restaurant with its own name and brand that will be a part of the mini golf course and its website, much how Hotel websites have their restaurants on their sites. Before becoming our client they purchased golfandputt.com and want to go with this domain for simplicity sake. In addition to this domain name they purchased 7 others that contain the bussiness' full name in some way, such as: goldenstategolfandputt.com goldenstategolfandputt.net, goldenstategolf-guitar.com etc., As well as: 3 variations of the golfandputt.com domain 3 variations of the restaurants name They wish to have all of these redirect to the main website or the restaurant page to "help with SEO," as they told me. From what I have researched on SEOmoz it seems better to simply optimize the website for Golden State Golf and Putt and the restaurant page for the restaurant's name. Additionally, I'm worried that redirecting the domains to the site will actually hurt them in rankings. If someone can shed some light on what the best practices for this sort of situation are I'd be much appreciative. Apologies in advance for the lengthy explanation but its a bit of a unique situation.
Technical SEO | | TVI0