Moz Q&A is closed.
After more than 13 years, and tens of thousands of questions, Moz Q&A closed on 12th December 2024. Whilst we’re not completely removing the content - many posts will still be possible to view - we have locked both new posts and new replies. More details here.
Local Keyword vs Business Name in URL
-
I am working with a local business owner who has purchased multiple domains. One includes the geographic area she serves and the type of business she runs. The other includes her business name and the type of business she runs. She is unsure of which domain she would like to use as the main URL for her business website. When choosing a domain for a small, local business, would you consider it advantageous to have the main geographic area that the business serves in the URL rather than the actual name of the business?
What would be the best use of domain name which isn't selected from a SEO standpoint?
-
It probably would have been faster to link to this: http://www.seobook.com/googles-matt-cutts-talks-down-keyword-domain-names than tell me to research it, but whatever. I'll link to it for the benefit of others. Thank you for your input, I will take it under advisement and continue to look into this before I speak to my client.
-
Remember that google can't distinguish between that of a brand or a small website. They work on algorithms, so throw out of the window what you think should be right and go do some research on it. Matt Cutts from Google was part of a discussion on this. You can't get any closer to the source and was quoted as saying that they have been giving too much away to sites with keywords in the domain. Read between the lines here and you have another change on your hands. I think my time trying to offer advice in this Q&A has reached it's limit so good luck on your search. Andy
-
Would you happen to have a link to some additional information on this topic? I'm still not really seeing the down side to using the geographic domain based on what you're telling me.
Basically, what I've gathered from your posts is that by choosing the geographic domain they may wind up losing the added traffic boost that it initially picked up. However, because we will be addressing linkbuilding and on-page content with the business name, other keywords, and local area in mind, I'm really not seeing where I would be risking much by choosing the geographic area URL over the business URL.
Do keep in mind that we are dealing with a small, local business here, not a national brand. The brand name will not carry much weight outside of the local area they serve, and because they are just getting started it basically carries no weight at all at this point.
-
Yes, I guess there would be a backlash in the same way that panda was about to use triggers to allow them to weed out the site that are not playing ball.... Never try and second guess what Google will or can do... And I speak with more than just a little experience here... and more than 80,000 first page terms for my customers. As soon as I get wind that there is to be a change, I prepare well in advance for my customers so that they will not get a knock of any sort. I guess this is what keeps customers coming back.
-
If Google says they have been giving away too much to websites with keywords in the domains, then you had better be sure that to improve their results, that they will do something with it. However, will they tell us? Probably not. But after doing this for just over 10 years, you learn not to mess around with the search engines. If you feel you want to go against a metric that Google will start using at some point, feel free to put your customer in that position, but it will be a cold day in hell before I would endorse or undertake something like that myself. Andy
-
If we all listened to what might happen, we would all still be living in caves and eating berries. Sometimes we have to cross a bridge when we arrive at, yes we need to be aware that the bridge is a swing bridge, but it's all about timing, we need to arrive in plenty of time. Google is not going to kill small businesses by penalising them for telling customers what they do in their domain name. How is Google going to tell the difference between a business name and a keyword loaded domain? Our office is near Heathrow, the local taxi firm is called Airport Taxis, likewise one of the local Indian restaurants is called The Curry House, what would Google do with these businesses, penalise their websites? There would be an almighty backlash.
-
iNet, Please don't think that I disregarded your opinion completely. I appreciate the advice, but I'm pretty sure that for this client and in this situation including the geographic area seems to be the better option. What Google says and what Google does frequently seem to be two very different things and I'm not sure if this really qualifies as being a keyword-heavy URL. It's a two word URL, not keyword stuffed, and simply targets the geographic area that the business serves. She wants to be recognized as the number one provider in that area, so the name seems to have relevance on top of being a strong local keyword. If you still believe that I'm making an error, please explain to me why and I will perhaps reconsider my position.
-
I might as well have not bothered posting here Just to reiterate my point again, Google is going to start clamping down on those sites that have too' many keywords in the domain, and this has been confirmed by Google, so you follow that route at your customers risk. Those that take this route now are going to regret that decision very soon. Those that ignore the warnings of Google better be prepared to pay the price... And there will be one! Never known of SEO's that go against what Google is doing. Crazy world!
-
Thank you for the insightful responses. I think that in this situation, I'm going to recommend to my client that we stick with the geographic domain as the main URL. The only question I have now is what to do with the leftover domains she has purchased. Would it be wise to forward them or create minisites/landing pages? Would it be considered spammy to build links to all of these domains regardless of whether or not they are forwarded to the parent domain? Would it be a waste of time?
-
Yes I agree, the ultimate decision is with the business owner. As we are all aware, smaller businesses require faster responses and typically have lower budgets, which are a key factor. Probably the most difficult factor is time, as we know, receiving content from small businesses when building a website is a challenge, getting them to update a blog, some social networking sites and even Twitter is all but impossible. They have good intensions but they do not have the staff or sufficient time to make it a success.
If Google wants to assist small businesses to compete online, they have to be sensitive to their environment.
-
Unless the company is a well known brand, which isn't likely as you have said they are a local business then the volume of searches will be higher for the location & business type as a keyphrase. Currently that type of domain name will have an SEO benefit. More traffic and higher rankings are the positives.
A lack of branding and the fact that the position regarding keyword matched domain names could change are downsides.
The final decision should rest with the business owner but I would present the positives and negatives too them as I have had some success with keyword matched domains. Aware of the potential changes in the future I will be stepping up the link building on the sites to try to protect them from any changes.
-
I support this view. Let's not do the same damage to our branding as Yellow Pages did to various AAA Aarwark Plumbing type businesses.
-
Okay, this is an interesting one. last year we had read many posts about keywords in the domain name, the industry seemed to be split more or less 50-50 if this was beneficial or not, so we decided to do an experiment on our own domain name. We will publish an article regarding this and post it more detail on SEOMoz later this month, but for now, our results are definitely in favour of keyword loaded domains.
Originally we used eCommerce-web-design-seo.com as our domain name, it said exaclty what we did. Just over six months ago, we changed this to our business name fusionsoft.co.uk, as well as doing this, we put a reasonable effort into seo to make sure that the test was fare. Over the last six months we have seen a huge drop in traffic, we are now going to change back to the keyword loaded domain.
Now, just to back this up a little further, we have a customer who runs a part time business, we built them a low budget website, the domain was their business name, Drysdale Couture, they had no money for marketing, we did all the basic onsite optimisation and set them up with a few local (quality directory inserts), they had no enquiries for 6 months. We suggested changing their domain name to a keyword loaded domain name, bespoke-bridesmaid-dresses.co.uk now they have a top 10 listing for variations of these keywords.
However, the counter argument is also a strong one, it is better to build a brand that customers will search for and find you directly, dependant on the nature of the business, building a strong brand can be expensive and take a long time.
Using a keyword loaded domain alongside good SEO Marketing will deliver results, however, the domain name should not be too heavily loaded and must be based on good search research, e.g. bespoke bridesmaid dresses.
I hope this helps.
-
I would avoid trying to run a website based on keywords or phrases as Matt Cutts has been quoted as saying that they have been paying too much attention to this in the past, so expect this to get a hit at some point. Those that have keywords in the name or that are made up of keywords will probably suffer a little.
Just go with the company name as this is the brand that people will remember and recognise.
Regards,
Andy
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
-
Would you recommend changing image file names retroactively?
We'll be optimizing file names moving forward, but it hasn't been done in the past. I have probably 1,500 that would need to be changed, so want to make sure it's a valuable use of time/worth the effort. 🙂 Also, has anyone used Media File Renamer for wordpress? Seems this would be a good way to rename files without needing to reupload everything. Thanks!
Image & Video Optimization | | jennafrye0 -
Amazon RTMP S3 vs Vimeo PRO vs Wistia? (Download Protection)
Context: A membership site, focused on a Russian market which is known to culturally pirate everything they see. Granted: ultimately you cannot hide video as a person can take a screen-capture/video camera method ultimately. Having said that. Is it still worth going the RTMP S3 route? Vs say Vimeo and Wistia. Will it help a bit or its a technology that is dying? Also with Vimeo PRO vs Wistia generally Vimeo is better value, but how is their analytics compared to Wistia (per user stats) if possible? Vimeo is a very popular, therefore downloaded 3rd party apps exist plentifully, is Wistia's platform unique to Vimeo in terms of its embed format if its same format this means that the commonly available tools as for Vimeo will work for Wistia, how ever if its different, and less popular as RTMP S3 is in this case less tools are available for it. Is that the case for Wistia?
Image & Video Optimization | | vmialik0 -
Google categories for local limousine service
I manage the Google places page for a SAB (local limousine company). The question is, should I add "taxi" and "airport shuttle service" as categories? I have listed only "limousine" and "car service' for now and I want to play it safe although those 2 are related to limo service. Sometimes people refer to limo service as "taxi service" or they are inquiring about prices for shuttle service to the airport and they end up booking the service quite often. Does Google look to our website to find these words in the content? Google Analytics show lots of people are finding us through those two keywords as well although you cannot find the word “taxi" on our website. The interesting thing is that when searching for "taxi + my zip code" the company shows up 4th on maps results and when searching for "shuttle service + my zip code”, the company shows up 2nd on local results and also 2nd in organic results. Is this enough to make me add these 2 categories? Second question is about the area served, does it make a difference (in rankings) if I choose “Distance from one location"over"List of areas served"? What happens is the red pin would be in a different location. If I choose "Distance from one location" the pin would be right in the center of the city (which I think it shouldn't matter anymore that much since the proximity to the centroid is not a ranking factor anymore). If “list of area” served is selected, (the city name will be chosen) then the pin would be about 5 miles West of the city center. Any thoughts will be appreciated. Thank you!
Image & Video Optimization | | echo10 -
Local Citation Sites
After searching through many local citation site I find that most only apply to the US. Are there any really good ones in Canada?
Image & Video Optimization | | casper4340 -
If my keyword have Keyword Difficulty Score 50 to 60 , then what kind of link build for get rank?
hello, i have 21 sites , if my keyword have Keyword Difficulty Score 50 to 60 , then what kind of link build for get rank?
Image & Video Optimization | | Brayvez0 -
Yext vs Localeze vs UBL for Local SEO
Which of these services is the best? Does anyone have experience with all three?
Image & Video Optimization | | nicole.healthline2 -
Local SEO address question - adding a suite number for shared address for office building
Hi, I have a client that has an address that is shared for a few different businesses in the holistic health field. My client is a chiropractor. There is an eye doctor, massage therapist and acupuncturist aslo sharing the same address. It's a subburban setting with two buildings all sharing one address. In the interest of preventing any merged listings down the road, I recently added un unofficial suite number to his website and Google places business listing. I also did this for all of his online directory listings, and for Bing and Yahoo as well. Did I do the right thing here? It seems to be having a positive impact on his local SEO as far as I can tell. Or at least there has not been any negative impact in the last 6 months Your thoughts?
Image & Video Optimization | | MozMan20 -
Is there an easy way to see how competitive a local search term is?
Is there a quick and easy way to see how competitive local search terms are? I am looking at helping my clients show up on the local search results. Some times all I have to do is claim a listing and they move right to the top. Sometimes I claim a listing and nothing happens so I get links and I get reviews and it takes awhile. I want to be able to put an accurate price point on the service I am offering. I have looked at the search volume and it hasn't been the best indicator because some industries are more competitve than others. Any help or suggestions would be appreciated.
Image & Video Optimization | | jimmyseo0