Multiple domains?
-
I do own a domain for my business right now, and would have a few questions, regarding the increase or traffic for my website and getting new business
1. Is it worth to purchase multiple domains, keyword search relevant, to my business?
2. If so how is the best way to use it? : have them redirect to my own website? a specific type of redirect? do I make a separate website for each of them?
3. for ex if the keyword is " tile and grout". I figured would be best to own "tileandgrout.com". How about "tile-and-grout.com"?
thank you in advance
-
I own a lot of EMDs and the keywords that they represent range from very easy to extremely difficult.
EMDs will still rank extremely well if you have a nicely optimized website with a few pages that is in the google index and the level of competition is very low. You don't need a lot of links, you just need to get it in the index. Lots of people say that this does not work in google any more but I can tell you for a fact that it does. I have #1 rankings with sites like this.
This will work until some competition arrives. When competition arrives the value of the EMD is tiny compared to the value of links and other assets. Then you have to earn your rankings just like any other website.
Should you use EMDs as a business model? Probably not. If you have a website of reasonable strength you can simply add a nicely optimized page to it and quickly rank above an EMD in a low-competition SERP. I do it to EMD competitors all of the time.
I see lots of people coming into forums crying... "That spammer with an EMD is beating me Wah!" I chuckle at these because I have EMDs that get their asses kicked all of the time. If an EMD is above you that webmaster has probably earned it unless there is no competition in your SERP and you have a website with zero strength. Get off of your butt and get working. You don't deserve to rank. The EMD is a tiny advantage, if you are pissed off about it then just call the guy up and offer to buy it from him. Then, a week after you take over the domain another weak site will move above you and you will be cryin' again.
-
Additionally David, do your best to step out of the mindset that there may be some sort of shortcuts that you can use to get more traffic. For the new website owner, building traffic is an exercise in being a solid business person. You want to understand what you need to do to keep your shop in order (on-page seo), then learn all you can about your customers and competitors--who they are, where they are online what they like, and who they follow socially. Follow them, give them a reason to follow you by interacting with them and demonstrating to them why your company is the right one for their job..
Minimally, several hours per week, every week, spent on those activities will pay off for you and your one domain--and think about it, if that's what it takes to get one domain off the ground, would you have time for two? What working person does?
-
Hi David,
Exact Match Domain (EMD) names are currently being ignored by Google. A while back Matt Cutts (the leader of the spam team at Google) said it should have the weight people give it. Watch this video for more information.
In September 2012 EMD update first came into effect to prevent poor quality sites from ranking well simply because they had words that match search terms in their domain names. When a fresh EMD Update happens, sites that have improved their content may regain good rankings. New sites with poor content — or those previously missed by EMD — may get caught. In addition, “false positives” may get released. Our latest news about the EMD Update is below.
As Thmoas and Daniel said, focus on the quality of your content, usability (which is the biggest next thing in SEO) and accessibility. Ensure that your website is all about your customers and the product, NOT about search engines.
Ensure you help search engines and users find the useful content on your website, relate to relevant pages using internal linking, breadcrumb and relevant keyword optimisation between linked pages. Ensure you dont have orphan pages and watch your Analytics system to know which pages are being viewed most, have most time on site, referred, these are the pages users love. If you see high bounce rate and exit rate, or drop outs from some pages, these pages need some serious improvements.
And never buy traffic or pay to include your links in linking schemes, focus more on PR for external links and probably editorials. Partner with blogs and webmasters to host articles with relevant and high quality content on their blogs.
I hope this can help.
Regards,
Issa
-
Hi David,
Forget Exact Match Domains. Firstly, they no longer have the appeal (as they are not as easy to rank nowadays). More than one domain means that you need to work twice or multiple times as hard in order to get them to rank.
You are best investing the time in your site. Generate more content, run a news section or a blog. Guest post on like sites with engaging topics in your industry. Engage in forums, be known as the leader in your industry. One strong site is better than many small sites. You don't see apple run a site for tablets OR phones OR laptops.
Hope this helps,
Dan
-
I would strongly suggest that you focus on your one domain and do not worry about doing things like purchasing domains with exact match names. it would be one thing if you already had an exact match domain however I guess you don't.
that is not a bad thing. Google has devalued exact match domains greatly in the recent past and will continue to do so in my belief.
Focus on building your brand and not on a get to the top quick scheme.
Don't buy domains spend the time and money on building content that is relevant and engaging that way when people come to your site they will be interested and want to purchase instead of clicking away when they go to whatever your exact match domain name is and realize that that's not what they want.
I hope I've been of help,
Tom
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
-
Onpage optimising for multiple sites
I’ve been given the task of optimizing a company’s websites (15 in total) that has multiple websites selling the same product. In terms of optimizing them, can I use the same set of meta descriptions, page title tags and key words for them all or do I need to produce a different set for each? The sites are for independently branded companies that are set up in a franchise-like arrangement. They all exclusively sell the parent companies joinery products
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | aplnzoctober180 -
One domain - Multiple servers
Can I have the root domain pointing to one server and other URLs on the domain pointing to another server without redirecting, domain masking or HTML masking? Dealing with an old site that is a mess. I want to avoid migrating the old website to the new environment. I want to work on a page by page and section by section basis, and whatever gets ready to go live I will release on the new server while keeping all other pages untouched and live on the old server. What are your recommendations?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Joseph-Green-SEO0 -
Do I need to worry about sub-domains?
Hi Moz commnity, Our website ranking was good and dropped for couple of recent months. We have around 10 sub-domains. I doubt them if they are hurting us. Being said all over in SEO industry like the sub-domains are completely different websites; will they hurt if they are not well optimised? And we have many links from our sub-domains to website top pages, is this wrong for Google? How to well maintain the sub-domains? Do I need to worry about them? Thanks
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | vtmoz0 -
Preserve domain on 301 redirect?
We have a domain solely used for print advertising that does a 301 redirect to a landing page (a department home page) on our "real" domain that is indexed on Google. Example: www.bmwrepairs.com redirects to www.repairshop.com/bmwrepairs. Is there a way to do a 301 redirect so that when they get redirected, the URL in the browser address bar remains www.bmwrepairs.com?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Jazee1 -
Duplicate content in external domains
Hi,
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | teconsite
I have been asking about this case before, but now my question is different.
We have a new school that offers courses and programs . Its website is quite new (just a five months old) It is very common between these schools to publish the courses and programs in training portals to promote those courses and to increase the visibility of them. As the website is really new, I found when I was doing the technical audit, that when I googled a text snipped from the site, the new school website was being omitted, and instead, the course portals are being shown. Of course, I know that the best recommendation would be to create a different content for that purpose, but I would like to explore if there is more options. Most of those portals doesn't allow to place a link to the website in the content and not to mention canonical. Of course most of them are older than the new website and their authority is higher. so,... with this situation, I think the only solution is to create a different content for the website and for the portals.
I was thinking that maybe, If we create the content first in the new website, send it to the index, and wait for google to index it, and then send the content to the portals, maybe we would have more opportunites to not be ommited by Google in search results. What do you think? Thank you!0 -
Community inside the domain or in a separate domain
Hi there, I work for an ecommerce company as an online marketing consultant. They make kitchenware, microware and so on. The are reviewing their overall strategy and as such they want to build up a community. Ideally, they would want to have the community in a separate domain. This domain wouldn't have the logo of the brand. This community wouldn't promote the brand itself. The brand would post content occassionally and link the store domain. The reasoning of this approach is to not interfere in the way of the community users and also the fact that the branded traffic acquired doesn't end up buying at the store I like this approach but I am concerned because the brand is not that big to have two domains separated and lose all the authority associated with one strong domain. I would definitely have everything under the same domain, store and community, otherwise we would have to acquire traffic for two domains. 1. What do you think of both scenarios, one domain versus two? Which one is better? 2. Do you know any examples of ecommerce companies with successful communities within the store domain? Thanks and regards
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | footd0 -
Exact match domain names
Hello, Someone approached a client of mine to sell a exact match domain name for a very competitive and high converting keyword. Would this be of any use and what are the best tactics to employ if it is purchased? I was of the opinion that the 'power' of exact match domain names are dying fast but would be interested to hear what people with experience in this think and what they have done with them (i.e. set-up a website on that domain or re-directed it)? Thanks, Rikki
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | RikkiD220 -
Changing domain extension to detoxify a domain
Hi there, A linkbuilding company that has been building links for us has not gained any sustained results. They have advised that our domain may be toxic, and that we should consider permanent redirecting from .co.uk to another domain extension in order to remedy this. Is this a recommendation worth considering?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Maximise0