blogs, social media, comparison charts, infographics, something interesting. show me in a fun way how you are different than those well established brands.
That's some tough competition... Good luck!
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blogs, social media, comparison charts, infographics, something interesting. show me in a fun way how you are different than those well established brands.
That's some tough competition... Good luck!
While I agree you should address that issue, I don't think it would have much to do with the OSE indexing. I would definitely attempt to contact a moz staffer, I think your case warrants one. Surprised they haven't stepped in with an answer yet they're usually on top of these forums.
hey Tom,
So this is weird. I went ahead and looked at the page in question and I see what you're talking about. I would question OSE's crawl of your site and direct that toward the moz-staff. Here's the reason:
The Just Discovered tool is showing a buttload of links coming to your page.. like 8 pages worth or something crazy. The inbound links section shows 2 domains... not sure what's up there.
If it were my site I'd spend more time and cross reference that with GWMT and maybe grab Majestic and AHREFS reports as well. Also, take an OSE inbound link list of the subdomain and see if the just-discovered links from the page in question show up there.
@ Christopher -
Excellent advice and I've thought about doing something like this for awhile now. I've been told conflicting things about those .ca addresses. Some say it matters, some say it matters not. We do already own the .ca of our domain and so far it's not pointed to anything... Do I just point it to our server and canonical it or develop a new site geared towards Canadians? As it stands, we have a few pages with Canadian specific content that are ranking well on Google and driving in traffic.
@Supple... It sounds like what you're saying is exactly how I interpreted the Tweet.. Google displays personalized results and factors IP address into that query, sure. So then it does matter that our server lives in Canada, while the majority of our business comes from the US? This, I guess, is my main concern. Thing is, I'm not too worried about it because we get a TON of U.S. traffic and are ranking incredibly well for our target keywords and only improving each week.
Just curious about how this all works.
Thanks for all the input guys, very helpful. Love this community.
So I just read an interesting Tweet:
#SEO Tip: #Google takes into account the location of the server (the IP) when projecting the search results #web
This is something I had not thought of. I suppose my question then is HOW does it factor this information into it's results?
For some reason, one of our sites is hosted on a Canadian server. We are a cloud hosting company and we serve all of NA with data centers in the US and Canada... For whatever reason we've used the Canadian server farm for our web server.
Could this possibly be hurting our NA google SERPs?
Anyone have any thoughts on this?