Shopping Carts & Sub Domains
-
I was hoping someone could guide me in making the correct decision regarding integrating my existing domain with a hosted shopping cart.
I have an existing website to promote my bricks and mortar retail operation and am expanding into web retailing. I will be using one of the major hosted shopping carts. What is the best way to join the two components from an SEO perspective? Have the cart as a sub domain of my main site, or move my existing domain name to be hosted by the cart provider and have both components operate under the same general domain?
I have read arguments that putting your cart within a sub domain is not a good idea because any clout of the pre-existing domain will not be shared with the sub domain; that they will be treated as two separate sites.
I have also read that using a sub domain is a good idea being that the content focus of the main domain (marketing and blogs) is different form the focus of the sub domain (product sales), and that the two components would benefit form earning their own rankings undiluted by the other.
And, I have also read that search engines are getting good at being able to deduce that an eCommerce sub domain is legitimate extension of a content intensive main domain, and that they treat the two components as a combined whole.
What is the truth? Which is the better way to go?
Any guidance would be appreciated.
-
I don't want to misrepresent what Mr. Cutts had to say on this subject as I don't yet understand all the nuances of the topic.
Here is the link to Matt's comments: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=_MswMYk05tk
Thanks for patiently entertaining my questioning.
-
The way that search engines have treated subdomains has changed repeatedly over time. The way that they treat a folder has been much more consistent.
Also, in that video did Matt Cutts specifically state that if you divide your site between a subdomain and a root domain will the power of your site be the same as if they were united?
There are a lot of domains on the web that have many subdomains that are owned by various people. The ranking power of subdomain A does not influence the ranking of subdomain B on these sites.
-
I just did some more digging around on the web and stumbled on a video from 10/2012 of Matt Cutts essentially saying to do whatever you want; Sub domain vs sub folder, there is not much difference in the way google treats them now.
I wish I could latch onto a definitive position. I don't want to shoot myself in the foot!
I will still research the cart pointed to a sub-folder scenario as you guys recommend.
-
pointing a folder would involve some DNS changes (to the CNAME record) - i think.
You would be best asking BC - it would be a similar process to pointing a subdomain to BC.
If you host a solution you are not always stuck in time, for example I use things like WooCommerce which is always being updated with new features and gives you great controls.
And just to clarify I am not saying that you cannot do the things YOU may want to do, but there are things that unless you've controls within the server you can't do - like implement GZIP for instance which can be a big deal on big sites.
-
My understanding is that, unlike licensed cart solutions, if you use a hosted cart like BC, it resides on their server and cannot be moved elsewhere, .
As for the BC templates being limiting, this is not the case for anything at the product level. My designers have been able to greatly modify our BC pages. We have been able to do anything we wanted so far. I have no issues with BC. They are adding new functionality at a startling pace. If we were using a licensed cart, we would be frozen in time, or have to keep pace with evolving web functionality ourselves.
I agree that we would not want to use BC as the front pages of our site. For this, it would be too limiting, which is exactly why I am in the situation I am. We want the best of both worlds without sacrificing on SEO.
I am not sure how you would "point BC to a folder on our site." I just don't know; I am not a web guy.(trying to learn, though)
-
moving the info site to BC is ok in general.
The reason both EGOL and I recommend having them together and on your own server is that you can control everything (see EGOL's list) and you aren't second guessing the settings on another server which you have no control over. It also means that things like templates can be made much more flexible to meet your exact needs and not just a few of your requirements.
If you can't some how point BC to a folder on your site then moving everything to BC is ok - the other option of course is to set up a new domain and let it exist in it's own right but you wouldn't get any benefit from that just as you wouldn't from a subdomain.
-
First off, I have to admit to EGOL I was wrong when I said I read “ that search engines are getting good at being able to deduce that an eCommerce sub domain is legitimate extension of a content intensive main domain, and that they treat the two components as a combined whole. This was a false recollection of an article about search engines being more lenient in assessing duplicate content in the form of product descriptions on retail sites that sell many variations of the same basic item. I apologize for including BS in my original post.
That being said, I would like to clarify my situation in hopes that advice can be offered.
I have an informational site that is produced with a CMS. It uses a domain I bought through Godaddy. The sight resides on another hosting service (not Godaddy). I am setting up my shopping cart with BigCommerce. How do I best integrate the two components? It sounds like the cart in a subdomain option is out. An option might be to move the informational site to be hosted on Bigcommerce and have it, and the cart, within the same domain? It sounds like EGOL recommends against this.
-
I think what EGOL means is that switching the domain to your hosting provider means you loose control of certain things within that domain which can be very important to seo. What could be a good compromise here is that you look at putting the shopping cart within a folder on the domain...
That is it. Some shopping systems require you to place all of your content into their system - your articles, your homepage, everything.
Then they can charge you high fees on all of your bandwidth, limit your ability to install software such as wordpress, use htaccess, have full and complete control over the format of your pages, have formats that require a lot more time to manage, not allow you to run scripts in the cgi-bin, not allow chron jobs.
They all do not have all of these problems. But some are really limiting and I would not want to marry into something that will limit my options.
I would look for a very flexible cart that allows you to have full control over the entire domain. Confining cart activities in a single folder would not be bad, but I still think that is limiting because I would like to have the ability to place "buy buttons" on any page anywhere within the site - even on pdfs if I want them there.
Lots of people come to these forums saying that they can't do one thing or another because of their shopping cart.
-
I think what EGOL means is that switching the domain to your hosting provider means you loose control of certain things within that domain which can be very important to seo. What could be a good compromise here is that you look at putting the shopping cart within a folder on the domain (not a subdomain as this would be a bad move), this means the work you've done on the domain would continue to effect the static info on there and the shop within the folder.
it may not be possible, it depends on your shopping cart provider - if it can't be done then move the domain across and ensure you have redirects in place from old domain links to new ones (eg your about pages redirect).
Hope that helps clear things up
-
I'm sorry, perhaps I am misunderstanding, but these answers seem totally contradictory to me. One the one hand EGOL said that he agrees that "**putting your cart within a sub domain is not a good idea because any clout of the pre-existing domain will not be shared with the sub domain" **
yet he also writes "The day that my sites get hosted by a shopping cart provider is a day that you can bet big money that I am dead and under."
I am sure they weren't intended to be contradictory and that I am simply misunderstanding. EGOL, would you mind elaborating or clarifying please?
-
I have read arguments that putting your cart within a sub domain is not a good idea because any clout of the pre-existing domain will not be shared with the sub domain; that they will be treated as two separate sites.
I agree with this. All of my sites are done this way.
I have also read that using a sub domain is a good idea being that the content focus of the main domain (marketing and blogs) is different form the focus of the sub domain (product sales), and that the two components would benefit form earning their own rankings undiluted by the other.
This is BS from an SEO viewpoint. Although some snooty marketing people might recommend it.
You can have unique banners for the store and promote it in tasteful ways that make this distinction for your visitors.
It's not about how it is hosted (subdomain vs folders)... it's how your navigation presents it to visitors and search engines.
And, I have also read that search engines are getting good at being able to deduce that an eCommerce sub domain is legitimate extension of a content intensive main domain, and that they treat the two components as a combined whole.
Where are you reading this stuff?
Have the cart as a sub domain of my main site, or move my existing domain name to be hosted by the cart provider...
The day that my sites get hosted by a shopping cart provider is a day that you can bet big money that I am dead and under.
I want my pages to be finely crafted arrows. I don't know if I am going to get that from a shopping cart system.
Someday you will probably decide to leave that shopping cart provider... it will be a lot easier to make that decision if you are not completely married to them.
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
-
Similar Keywords on Addon Domain
Hi all, I'm looking at setting up a second website targeting some similar keywords to my existing blog. I host the site through bluehost and am considering hosting the other website as an addon Domain. Whilst the content on both websites will be different both will target the same keywords. Does anyone know if because I'm targeting the same keys words using an addon Domain this could impact my existings site google rankings? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Technical SEO | | thriftypence0 -
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 -
How many serp results for a domain.
I thought this one was carved into stone, max number of results from the same domain in SERP is... two. Or... three?! I was searching for some familiar keywords and found three results from the same domain, isn't that... unusual?
Technical SEO | | max.favilli1 -
URL Structure & SEO - Should we be using sub-folders?
Hi all, As part of our content marketing efforts we have run a number of initiatives in the past and created pages on the website to go along with them (also where the links for these particular projects point to). However, the URL structure isn't actually a reflection of where the pages sit on the site. Unfortunately I'm unable to provide a URL for reasons I won't bore you with, but here's an example: We recently ran a competition that was very successful in generating links. The URL for this is www.domain.co.uk/competition. However, the page actually sits within the About Us section - which is where all of our news and content marketing pages go - and uses a URL override. How much of an issue is this in regards to A) Our SEO in general?; and B) Ensuring we receive as much equity from the links we earn as possible? A brief explanation of what URL overrides actually are would also be useful! (We have a digital marketing agency who handle most of our SEO) Thanks in advance guys! John
Technical SEO | | NAHL-14300 -
Domain change recommendations
We recently migrated one of our websites to a new domain. Obviously we were expecting a decrease in traffic initially, but it has actually gone down by 70% week-over-week since we made the switch. We set up a 301 redirect from the old domain to the new domain, changed all internal links to the new domain and changed all inbound links that we owned to the new domain. Our research suggested the best way to approach a domain change was by keeping it simple and not making too many changes at once. So my questions are: 1. Are these the kinds of results we should expect initially after a domain change? And if not, 2. What are the steps we should take from here? Thanks!
Technical SEO | | gouldtr0 -
Domains
My questions is what to do with old domains we own from a past business. Is it advantages to direct them to the new domain/company or is that going to cause a problem for the new company. They are not in the same industry.
Technical SEO | | KeylimeSocial0 -
Domains and subdomains
When I started a campaign for my message, I got the message: "We have detected that the domain www.vamospaella.com and the domain vamospaella.com both respond to web requests and do not redirect. Having two "twin" domains that both resolve forces them to battle for SERP positions, making your SEO efforts less effective. We suggest redirecting one, then entering the other here." I wasn't sure whether I had said it was a subdomain when in fact it was a domain (or the other way round), so I started another campaign for the same website using the other option and the message didn't come up. However, I still don't understand what you meant by this and whether it's an issue. When I search for my website in Google, it shows as vamospaella.com when other websites come up as www. and then their domain name. If it is a problem, is it to do with my hosting package and how it's set up or is it to do with my local site on my computer? I did ring my web host, 1&1, but they said they couldn't see a problem. Please can you let me know how I can resolve this as my ranking is still quite low in Google and I'm not sure why. If it is because of "twin domains", then will Google see my content as duplicated and keep me low in their rankings? I'm new to SEO and not a website novice, so please answer in lay terms! Thanks Melissa
Technical SEO | | melissa10 -
Domain Masking with New Keyword-Rich Domains
Hello, friends. We have an ecommerce site and we also own several keyword-rich domains but haven't done anything with them yet. Is there any value in using domain masking to point them to either product pages or special landing pages on our primary ecommerce site? Here's an example: Primary site is widgetzone.com Keyword rich URL is acmewidget.com (which is totally blank and isn't indexed) It could point to our category page for Acme Widgets: widgetzone.com/category/acme-widgets or it could point to a new landing page: widgetzone.com/acme-widgets My concern is that because the keyword-rich URL hasn't been utilized at all there's really no point in redirecting it. I'm of the mind that it's either going to be ineffective at best or a duplicate content issue at worst. What do you guys think? As a follow-up, if we don't redirect these domains, what should we do with them? Just try to sell them off rather than create totally new sites?
Technical SEO | | jbreeden0