Will PPC elsewhere on my domain help my organic SEO?
-
I have an e-commerce site with a small product line which an on-going organic SEO campaign.
As a side project, I'm planning on doing some PPC testing with a highly converting product squeeze page, which I'll run Google ads to gain traffic. (this is PPC only and for this page I am not concerned with organic SEO traffic - although of course the page itself will be fully optimized).
I am wondering whether to run this squeeze page on a sub-domain or sub-directory of the existing site, OR to host it on a completely fresh domain?
I would like to know if as side-effect my existing Website benefit 'organically' from some of the PPC traffic, helping with it's domain authority, etc.,? or could this possibly do any harm?
p.s. Bear in mind this is not going to be a page visible on the on the main site itself, it's a separate entity for PPC.
Would be great to have some expert Moz eyes on this and opinions. Thanks!
-
Interesting stats there Kyle. thanks!
-
Thanks very much for your explanation Paul. Makes total sense! Good to know this is quite common and no harm will come of it.
For this initial test I will add the no-index and keep it in silo, which will also make measurements more precise - not mixing traffic.
your P.S. is exactly why I'm proposing to treat the page as a separate entity (at least for now). I see it as a high conversion page for visitors to do one thing - click Buy, and not to start browsing around the rest of the site.
thanks again for your reply.
Greg
-
There's no risk to having the PPC landing on your main site, Greg. The scenario you're describing is extremely common. Often it is even done with multiple landing pages that are customised for different PPC ads, or are specifically targeted for different media buys. (Most sites build these in a special directory which they no-index in robots.txt to keep the engines from wasting time crawling them)
The reason these pages are often kept separate (ie not in the navigation) is to keep organic visits from polluting the data about the PPC visits. (or other media buys).
Simply getting traffic to the page from your PPC won't do anything to help your rankings (Otherwise people would be buying PPC specifically to game that process, wouldn't they?) As Irving says - the only organic benefit would come if some of those PPC visitors then shared out or linked to your landing page.
If you truly want to split out your landing page to isolate it to PPC only, just add a meta-robots no-index tag to the header of the page to tell the engines not to index it.
So... if a real page that would benefit other site visitors and you DON'T' mind PPC traffic mixing with organic - build as a regular page on your site and linked internally as well as from PPC.
If purely for PPC and you don't want it used by regular visitors, build on your main site, don't link to it, and add meta-robots no-index to keep it out of the SERPs.
Hopefully that makes sense?
Paul
P.S. One of the main arguments against having PPC (or any other) marketing landing page integrated into the regular site content via linking is that a landing page, by definition, is trying to get the visitor to do one specific thing. This usually means stripping out all the rest of the usual site template, like navigation, search, additional footer functionality etc. This helps focus the PPC visitor on the task you want them to complete, but makes an inadequate experience for the organic visitor who wants to then explore multiple pages of your site.
-
Hi Greg.
No. Would be my short answer. Outside of what Irving already mentioned.
But I would also consider reading this post from SEER. I've noticed similar trends when allowing ppc landing pages to be index. Just be sure to avoid self cannibalising (is that a word?) keywords.
http://www.seerinteractive.com/blog/how-creating-crawlable-landing-pages-increased-quality-score
rgds
Kyle
-
You can still put it on the main domain and have it noindex,followed and orphaned. It can link back to the main nav but not be linked to from the main site. That would be completely safe and the fact that it is on the domain and not some other unrecognizable domain would help with credibility and would be one less variable which could be a culprit for causing a lower conversion rate.
-
thanks Irving for your response.
The page is just a test for the moment, so that's the reason I'm cautious to put it on the main domain & feature in the navigation, etc.
I'm aware of how PPC can help with organic SEO in a more standard setting with the page featured as usual, and yes it would certainly be nice to get some added PR as side-effect.
I'm all for any benefit that may trickle through as a side-effect, but it's not a primary concern, unless of course it does harm.
-
If it was a real page on your site linked to in the main nav it could help SEO because the more people who see your page the greater the chance that people will share the link and talk about it which could in turn benefit SEO.
The way you are doing it though I don't see any benefit, unless the PPC landing page passes some PR and traffic to the main site via navigational links. What is the reason for not hosting it on the main domain?
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
-
Cannot re-activate PPC after GWT violation has been removed.
Google adwords not allowing us to reactivate after GWT violation removed and site deemed clean by Google. Attempts at reaching them for guidance have been unsuccessful. Any suggestions? Thank you.
Paid Search Marketing | | ahw0 -
Can you market to someone 30 days AFTER they visit your site via PPC?
Hi all, I'm looking to market to visitors 30 days AFTER they have been to a website. Their is a coupon this business wants to run every 30 days to its' repeat customers (and if they purchase again); thus, 30 days more will resume. I'm aware that your remarketing list can capture audiences from 30, 60, and 90 days past. I'm talking about future display ads running 30 days after visitor has cookies enabled. Thanks for your help! Cole
Paid Search Marketing | | ColeLusby0 -
Using multiple domains in one Adwords account
Hi, I am currently setting up an Adwords account and wanted to know if you can run multiple websites through one account. We have 2 domains each promoting a different one of our brands and i was wondering the best way to run the account. Regards Ben
Paid Search Marketing | | benjmoz0 -
Will User See More Than One of My Facebook Ads
I have numerous campaigns set up in my Facebook Advertising account. If I have different ads in different campaigns but with the same geographic and demographic targeting, could one individual see multiple instances of my advert?
Paid Search Marketing | | Superdream0 -
PPC for a music shop - advice
Hi, I'm pretty new to this but I'm doing my best, so I've created a few campaigns such as 'Guitars' and 'Drums' and started to add keywords to each one such as 'buy guitars online' etc would it also be wise to add brands to this campaign? or should I create a completely different campaign focusing solely on brands? What would you recommend? Thanks, Dan
Paid Search Marketing | | Sparkstone0 -
SEOMOZ of PPC?
Hi The site I'd been following over the years last updated in May, so it's clearly not the authority it once was, I know there's a PPC post here about once a month but I was wondering where do the PPC brigade spend most of their time? My work is 50/50 atm but was once much more PPC focused, is there an SEOMOZ equiv. in the Paid Search world?
Paid Search Marketing | | xoffie0 -
Google PPC Management
Okay, so I have a client who wants me to manage their ppc on Google. It seems like either they give me access to their PPC account or I manage it via my own account and pre-bill for the cost, later supplying reports. Are those the two options? Thanks...MJ
Paid Search Marketing | | 945010