I got an email a few days ago with a question from a web consultant whose client was solicited with an offer to purchase a keyword-rich domain name. The premise here is that because Google counts keywords in your domain name (see my recent post, “How to SEO Your Content: 16 Places to Place Your Keywords“), that having a keyword-rich domain name would benefit the client’s search ranking. Was it worth it, and was it worth the nearly $500 they wanted for the domain name?
I get this question every so often, and I even wrote a post about it way back in 2009. So what’s changed in those ensuing 7 years, if anything?
My standard consultant answer to these types of questions is, “It depends.” (Yes that’s a joke.)
Let’s break it down a bit.
Does Having Keywords in Your Domain Help SEO?
The simple answer here is, yes. If you have already established your domain name, and it has keywords in it, then it is a factor in Google’s ranking. As an example, this website is www.dog-obedience-training-review.com. I’ll give you three guesses on what their company is all about, and the first two guesses don’t count. They rank well for all kinds of dog training information.
When I set up my own domain, I specifically wanted “Bay Area” in the domain name, because people search for SEO training in the San Francisco Bay Area where I teach. It’s a ranking factor, and it helps me get found for my target search terms. How much does it help? Who knows?
Does Adding Extra Domains Help SEO?
So it would seem logical that if I have a website, www.company.com, and purchase a couple target keyword domains, and point them at my website, that because Google counts keywords in the domain as valuable, then this would help me rank higher for that target phrase.
Hold that thought for just a second.
Google counts unique web addresses (including domains) as being a web page. So www.company.com/page1.html is one page of content. Similarly, www.company.com/page2.html is another page of content, and Google gets that.
However, if www.company.com/page1.html has some content, and www.company.com/page2.html has exactly the same content (because you copied it for some reason), then Google gets a little suspicious that something fishy is going on, because the content is identical. This is called duplicate content, and Google will discount the second address, and it won’t rank well, if at all (I’ve tested this).
Now if you compound this and point www.keyword1.com to www.company.com, you’re going to further duplicate the content on every page. www.keyword1.com/page1.html will be identical to www.company.com/page1.html, but in a different domain. Now things are smelling really fishy to Google, because you’ve duplicated ALL pages into another domain.
If you purchased five keyword domains, this has just been compounded to be a bigger duplicate content issue, and you’ve completely shot yourself in the foot. Google will devalue all the duplicate pages, and they won’t perform at all in the search engines.
The Problem With Keyword Domains
Unless you’re starting a new website or changing the domain to something else for branding, keyword domains severely limit you. You’re stuck with whatever you chose, and if you chose wrong, then it will prevent you from expanding into other lines of business or switching gears if your company changes (and whose doesn’t?).
Being very picky about the domain name is important so you don’t box yourself in unnecessarily. My own domain for instance, includes “Bay Area” and “Search Engine”, but no other specific terms. That’s deliberate. I didn’t want to box myself into one thing.
Furthermore, if you haven’t done the keyword research to find out what people are searching for, randomly buying a keyword domain could be a complete waste of money. If you think it sounds good, but haven’t done the research, then you might as well roll some dice. Chances are good your roll of the dice will lose.
As an example, the consultant’s client website was something like “SamsAutoRepair.com” (I’m making this up – not a real website). The domain they were being offered was something like “houston-carburetors.com”. Sounds good. But why would they limit it themselves to carburetors when they do so many other things too?
When It’s Useful to Have Multiple Domain Names
Yes, you absolutely can have multiple domain names, but you don’t want them to resolve or be indexed by Google. To prevent that you set up a 301-redirect or “forward” the domain to the “real” domain. If you 301-redirect a domain, it will never be indexed, because the “301 error” is a message to Google that “sorry, this URL doesn’t exist, here’s the ‘real’ one you should pay attention to.”
As an example, I used to have bayareasea.com which redirected to bayareasearchengineacademy.org. The former is just easier to send in social media or in emails. But I never want it to be indexed. Go ahead and try it (click the link). You’ll see it automagically changes to the correct web address.
You might want to own the .com, .org and .net versions of your domain so a competitor doesn’t get them. Just 301-redirect them to the one you want indexed. Example:
- lpcfoundation.com goes to lpcfoundation.org
- lpcfoundation.net goes to lpcfoundation.org
I had a student in one of my SEO classes that said people were always calling them to say their website was down. It’s because their company name was an odd spelling, and the customer was mistyping it. I said, “Buy the misspelled version, and 301-redirect it to the correct version. No one will ever know the difference, and you’ll stop the phone calls and end customer frustration!”
So to conclude, in my opinion, the company that was being solicited for a keyword domain purchase, was a complete waste of their money. It certainly wasn’t worth the $500 unless they had done their due diligence on the selling company as being legit, done the keyword research, and validated it as a viable option that wasn’t going to limit their business in other ways.
What are your thoughts on this? Tell me below!
I have a client that purchased multiple domain names so his competitor doesn’t have them. Right now, I just redirect them to his website. Question. Can I or should I register the domain names with Google and Bing? If so, what’s the SEO advantage if any?
thanks,
geno
Hi Geno, If you’re redirecting them properly with a 301-redirect, you can’t register them with Google, because the domain won’t resolve. So there is no SEO advantage to having them, but it’s fine that you have them to keep others from taking them as long as they stay redirected.
Great post Thomas! My question:
A car rental company located in an island in spain (mybrand.com), if I create carhire+islandname.co.uk (that 301redirects to mybrand.com) would I benefit from using this keywordrich domain for backlinking purposes (maybe because of its keywordrich anchor text) instead of directly linking mybrand.com? (backlinks would be created in that cctl country)
Could it be a good strategy doing it for each country? (France, italy, etc) or it would be the same result than not using the keywordrich domain? Hope Im clear 🙂
In any case thank you!
Hi Daniel, unfortunately, linking to a domain that is 301-redirected will do no good. Google doesn’t index it, so it never exists in their database to help you.
Hope that helps.
Tom
Would it help if I pointed a keyword domain name to a single landing page on my site, then provide a link on that page to my products? For example, I sell Hazmat Placards on my site. I registered hazmatplacards.org and forwarded it to my site. After reading this article I removed the forwarding. However, I was thinking…if I created a page on my site named hazmatplacards.asp and pointed hazmatplacards.org to that page, then placed a link on that page to my hazmat placards….would that be considered duplicate content?
Hi Tim,
Links don’t hurt and can help your SEO. But see my other response below to Jan. You can’t have a domain point to a subpage, only to another domain. You can 301-redirect referral clicks from that domain to a subpage if you want, but it won’t help your SEO efforts at all.
Hope that helps.
Thanks for an insightful post, Thomas. So if I am looking at buying some domains to use in my marketing (say, widgetA.com, to point to my allwidgets.com site) I should use the 301-redirect in all cases, correct? The purpose of the extra domains is that we have multiple customer personas – and want to specifically direct them to the widget A page rather than http://www.allwidgets.com/widgetA – particularly when we start with print media.
Thanks,
Jan
Jan, you can’t point a domain at a single page. But you could point it at a subdomain like http://widgetA.allwidgets.com and that could work. Or you use a 301-redirect so any referral clicks from widgeta.com get redirected to the folder level. It’ll never get indexed, so it won’t help your SEO, but it works for print or other collateral marketing. I also use bit.ly for that purpose. You can purchase a tiny domain and point it to bit.ly. As an example, http://bit.ly/10waysreport goes to a subpage on my website, but I also have my own vanity url, http://basea.me/10waysresport.
Hope that helps.
Thanks for the info. What about this scenario:
I sell hammers. I have hammer.com (wouldn’t that be nice). I then purchase nyc-hammers.com, brooklyn-hammers.com, queens-hammers.com, and manhattan-hammers.com. I forward them directly to hammer.com.
Would that help?
Hi Rory,
Again, if the domain isn’t indexed because you’re forwarding it, it won’t do you any good from an SEO perspective. If Google doesn’t index it, it doesn’t exist, and therefore has no value whatsoever. If you had a blog with nyc-hammers.com and had links that pointed to hammers.com, then that’s a different story. They both have unique content and therefore would be valuable.
Hope that helps.
Tom
Hi Thomas,
Thanks for the excellent article.
I do have a question though if you don’t mind:
Let’s say, I have a webshop pen.com, selling different type of pens. I also have a competitor office.com, who sell similar pens, and pay Adwords to be on the top of the Google if anyone search for “pen”. I am the second or third on the Google search list.
What if I register ballpen.com, fountainpen.com etc…, put UNIQUE content on each of these new sites (few quality sentences and pictures) and then 302 redirect them to my original site pen.com.
I this case google will crawl the new sites and may put these on the first page of the search results after a while.
Is my theory wrong or can work?
Thanks,
Marou
Hi Marou, You can create other domains and link them back to the primary domain, and as long as the smaller domains have unique content, they’ll be indexed. I’m not sure why you’d 302-redirect them because that’s a temporary redirect, and I don’t see the advantage to doing that. The smaller sites probably won’t get ranked for anything, but it can generate some keyword links back to the primary site if that’s your goal.
Tom
Really useful article Thomas thanks.
I’m looking into purchasing several keyword domain names as blog sites so each site has unique content and linking back to my branded e-commerce website. I know this will be a lot of work keeping the blogs relevant for the target audience but I think it will pay dividends in promoting the branded website.
Hi Mike, yes that’s a lot of work for sure, but it could have a payoff. The keyword domain won’t really add much to the formula. You can just as easily create a keyword.wordpress.com blog (for free), and it will work just as well. Do the same on Blogger, Tumblr, or other free hosting sites and save the $ to buy and host domains.
Tom
Hi Thomas,
I thought 302 redirect is a better option than 301, because if I use 302, then the site’s (unique) content will be indexed (while 301 redirect won’t)?
Thanks for your inout!
Very interesting post, thank you for sharing!
I have a question, what if I buy another domain name and create a simple landing page (without duplicated content) with a button that takes them to the main website ?
The idea is to use the new domain for SEO as it has much better keywords.
What is your opinion about this?
Hi Samuel, There’s no problem in doing this. I don’t think it will have much effect other than to build a link. Google looks at domain diversity as well as the richness of the content from those incoming links. So if you just have a button with no text, it’s not helping much. If you have a series of articles with keyword-rich links that are contextually relevant to the copy and the destination page, then that will be more significant. Just a keyword domain pointing at another domain isn’t going to give you much help.
Tom
Thomas, I have enjoyed jumping on many a webinar with you over the years and ran into you on Twitter profile today.
You have covered this topic in great depth.
Here are a few comments:
There may have been a time when domain names that contained keywords that were an “exact match” to their core business services matter more. Semantic search has changed SEO. I like what you said – that a structured approach to building contextually relevant support pages is better. The domain still matters, but maybe less. Things like user engagement, CTR, how fast the pages load, AMP, and machine learning matter more in my experience.
Hey Jeannie, Good to see you here!, You’re spot on with all your points. My problem with using a domain name is how do you pick the “perfect” domain name for your business? What if your business shifts (like mine has many times), and you aren’t doing exactly what you picked before? Content, content, content all matter the most.
Thanks for your comments and your experience!
Tom
Hi Thomas,
We are opening a law firm website where we are going to add a domain that is currently available and actually has a strong keyword representing what we do. The question is that there are other areas too that we would like to focus and we were thinking to but domains for those keywords and redirect them to our main website (of course by meeting google policy – 301 redirection) – By having the domain it will prevent the competitors to open them in the future as well as helping our SEO. What is your advise?
Hi Tom, A domain that is 301-redirected will give you no SEO benefit because it won’t be indexed. It will, as you say, allow you to own the domain so a competitor can’t own it. Hope that helps.
Tom
Hi there,
Thank you for the interesting post!
I have a question.. I have an e-commerce site with domain company.com (hypothetically), and I want to add a domain containing a strong keyword. I was thinking to set the new domain as the primary one and then 301-redirect the old domain at a page level to the new one. What is you advise on that?
Thank you in advance for your comments!
Hi Tonia, There’s no problem with that. You’ll need to re-verify Google Search Console with the new domain. However, if you have a keyword domain that you switch to and your company products/services change or you start to offer something different than what’s in the keyword domain, then you’re stuck. It’s just something to consider before jumping.
Good luck.
Tom
Hello, I just used .htaccess file to redirect one domain name to another domain name. For instance, the both names are little bit different – example.com to examplehtml.com. I am afraid that google may discourage my page rank. The used the following code:
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^example.com [NC,OR]
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^www.example.com [NC]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ https://www.eamplehtml.com/$1 [L,R=301,NC]
Please confirm whether this code is correct and google won’t discourage my rank as well.
Hi Mohamed,
That looks right (other than the typo in your destination URL). You probably don’t need the second condition line because I think the first one will catch both www and non-www versions of the URL. So this should work:
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^example.com [NC]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ https://www.examplehtml.com/$1 [L,R=301,NC]
The best way to make sure it’s working is to test it. You can also use the Screaming Frog SEO tool (https://www.screamingfrog.co.uk/seo-spider/) to make sure it’s returning a 301-redirect. They have a free version you can download to test with.
I own a flower shop that is located in Wylie, TX. My google rankings are great when searching for Wylie flowers, wylie florist, etc.. Less than 5 miles away are several towns in our delivery area, but I will focus on the town of Sachse. Our site list well in google local for the sachse area, but in the organic listings we are ranked 5th behind a flower shop in Sachse, a florist from New York (www.avasflowers.net › Texas › Dallas), a Yelp site, another out of state florist (www.troysflorist.com/florists-sachse-tx-ct12369/), our site wylieflowershop.com, then a florist from Minnesota (www.flowersbyjerry.com/tx-texas/sachse/florist.aspx?rflx=Sachse,TX). They appear to have unique landing pages but all selling the same product. I own multiple domains mainly to keep competition from grabbing them and to attempt to keep my business area. These out of state florist are just stealing our business blind. What is the best way to combat this? This is just in one city, multiply that by the 15 cities that we serve who may or may not have a florist in that town. Any advice or direction would be appreciated.
Hi Danny,
I can’t speculate without doing a thorough analysis, which takes some time. Local search is different from “regular” SEO. Google “knows” where your business is located and therefore, you’ll show up high for searches in Wylie. But the further from the city centroid you get, the less you’ll show up for a local shop. To get results for local search can take some work, but it can be done. If you’re interested, please contact me through the website, and I’ll introduce you to a colleague who will help you (for a consulting fee of course).
Hi,
Will it help to register keyword domains, create a landing page on it with simple text which contains a good key-word density and link to my real website which contains that keyword? So no 301 yet just a referral link to my site / page? Please advise.
Hi Milan, It’s possible that it would have a small benefit. Google no longer counts keyword density, so that’s irrelevant. The links from a domain are assigned a value based on a lot of things: age of the domain, amount of quality content on the domain, other incoming links to that domain, etc. If you just have a microsite with little content, the value of the links will be very low. Furthermore, Google is now counting citations (company name links) more than keyword links. So I personally don’t think this is an effort that is going to be very fruitful, especially if you count the cost of the hosting and domains.
Hi Thomas, i created several landing pages for a client, they have enabled them to rank well. Now he is proposing purchase of keyword rich domains eg newyorkmarble.com and newyorkgranite.com. the idea is to create single page landing sites. Can I use canonical tags and point both single page websites to Mysite.com or to mysite.com/newyork-marble and mysite.com/newyork-granite?
Hi Vijay, You can create the canonical tags, but it means that the page will no longer have any value. The canonical tag is intended to tell the search engines to “please ignore this URL, and use the one I’m telling you about instead.”
Dear Thomas,
I am doing some market research for a client, who is paying an SEO company a monthly fee for dozens of keyword specific domains, or ‘mini sites’ as they are selling them – these sites are being indexed. (Not 301’d) and all link back to her main site, which ranks quite well for the keywords she cares about.
The other sites don’t appear on page one. There are dozens of them, none of which she owns. For me, this feels very grey hat. But if she stops paying, the agency will pull the sites down, and I’m worried that this will harm her site domain authority. My instinct is to pull away from these types of tactics, and to invest instead in better content on her main site. How can I measure what the impact of these sites is? What’s your opinion?
Hi Emily, I totally agree with you. I’d look in Google Search Console to see if any of them have been flagged with manual actions too. It’s unlikely that they’re adding much value to the website ranking, and personally, I’d be uncomfortable being held hostage to this kind of tactic.
Hi Thomas,
Thanks for sharing your seo knowledge! I’d like to ask you something about multi domains point to the main domain. My website is curvysea dot com and it has been online for about 10 years, I set up the domain before with .com because I want to target worldwide but now most of my customers mainly come from my country Australia and New Zealand so I thought of buying extra country domains i.e. .com.au; .co.nz; and local domains .sydney and .melbourne . All of the extra domains (just domains, no extra contents) will redirect to the main domain curvysea.com
Will I have to pay separate hosting for those domains or just buy them and then redirect them to my main domain.
Could you please tell me if it would help my seo ranking and user experience?
Is there other way to index them (with no duplicate content issues) instead of using 301 redirect as you said it isn’t indexed and doesn’t help with seo?
Thank you!
Hi Cindy, Good questions. If you redirect the domains to your primary domain, no you don’t pay any additional hosting fees. If you’re primarily trying to target more local traffic, you may want to use the .com.au domain as your primary, and 301-redirect the .com to it. If there are products that are specific to New Zealand that are different from the Australian products (maybe there’s some overlap) or you have a NZ shipping address or office, you could test what country the visitor is coming from or what their default country is, and redirect them to the .co.nz version automatically. Otherwise, I don’t think it will make a large difference in your organic position or traffic to just leave it as the .com or .com.au domain.
Hope that helps.
Tom
Does “masking” a URL 301 direct change any of the information stated in blog?
Thanks!
Jennifer, not sure I understand your question. If you’re using cloaking or some other technique to mask it, that violates Google’s rules, and can cause you to be penalized.
I have read all of the posts and reply’s to this thread, I don’t know if I am missing something or if my question is somehow different. I have a website that we are building for Las Vegas tourists. It is a directory site to find a few specific industry products. I have a main site and over 300 search term domains, (I think these are keyword domains from what I have read here). Yes, I am interested in SEO, but also as much in the fact that if someone searches for “find clubs Las Vegas” that it is redirected to our main site. But that Findclubsvegas.com site shows up when they search for it as it has most of the words searched for. Does this happen? and if you 301? What would be the best method? Thanks…
Brian, I’m not sure I 100% understand your question. But if you’re properly redirecting a domain, it will never be indexed, and will never show up in the search results. Hope that helps.
Hi Thomas!
What a great discussion! Thank you.
If this is still active I have a question. Say I’m in the business of shoes and live in the city of Vancouver. So… I register a business and buy the domain vancityshoes.com . I get pretty popular. I have good rankings and people know how to find me. But then I move. Say I move to New York. So I change my domain to nycityshoes.com and 301 redirect the old site to the new. Does that mean all the seo I’ve built from the old domain is now gone. Can you suggest the best practice here?
Eva
Eva, Putting aside that you’re selling shoes locally in Vancouver, yes. You’d 301-redirect the old domain to the new, and theoretically, you would perhaps temporarily lost rank until the other site got reindexed. However. because you’re suggesting a Vancouver shoe store that moves to NYC, that would be a different animal. Google knows that you were a Vancouver local store, and therefore it would have relevance for Vancouver shoppers. If you moved to NYC with the new domain, you’ve got a whole new set of competitors to contend with. You’d no longer rank for Vancouver, and you might rank in NYC. Assuming your SEO efforts were around Vancouver originally, just 301-redirecting the domain to the new one wouldn’t work, because you’d have to redo all your other SEO efforts to target NYC. This would essentially negate all the old SEO.
We’re getting ready to launch a new domain here, and everything will be redirected, but we’ll be putting fresh SEO in place too where it makes sense. (hint hint – stay tuned for the relaunch soon!)
Thomas,
As a customer with a website rather than an SEO professional I’ve read the above with interest but still don’t quite “get it” I’ve been sold three domain names that relate to my business ending with “…….hamshire.com”. They were redirected to my current website and I’ve been informed that once Google picks this up it will be an advantage. I suspect from the previous posts that this isn’t quite true. Am I being lied to?
Andy
Hi Andy, If you’re redirecting the domains to the main domain, Google will never index it, so it will have no effect. Test it by going to abchampshire.com and if the URL in the browser automatically changes to xyzhampshire.com, then it’s being properly redirected. If abchampshire.com still resolves, and Google indexes it, you may have a duplicate content penalty. So it can actually harm your ranking. The only way around it is to have a canonicalization tag in your html code, which points to the “real” domain. Hope that helps.
Tom
Hi Thomas,
For a laymen, this has been a very helpful thread. I am in the service business and rank well locally. I have recently added a new subservice and I am also becoming known at a state level and brand recognition is creeping into surrounding states.
I am wanting to purchase a few keyword domain names to essentially protect myself from future competitors (mainly LOCATIONservice.com). From my understanding, I would want to 301 Redirect these domains to my current site as my current site covers these services in depth.
If I understand this correctly, Google accounts for age of a site in its results, will these 301 Redirected domains ‘age’ in Google’s eyes? Also – would I have to pay hosting for a 301-redirect domain?
Hi Adam, If the domains are correctly 301-redirected, Google will never index them. Therefore, the age of the domain will be irrelevant. You do not need to pay for hosting for a redirected or forwarded domain. It’s just a pointer to another website, and you’d only need to pay the domain registration fee when it renews.
Hey Thomas,
Thanks for the article! I own a small business in Orange County. While my domain and website ranks fairly well in my area, I advertise on some paid websites which is where I end up getting most of my business. My domain does not include any keywords, but I was able to grab the perfect domain last night for only $150 (example http://www.orangecountymyjob.com) which I believe has the perfect keywords for my business. Should I switch this domain for my current one? People that have my business card will still know the actual name of the company which will forward to the new domain and on all my advertising websites the company name will still be there but I will link them to the new domain. Wouldn’t that be better for organic search results having a domain with the perfect keywords or no?
Hi Brian, I can’t speculate, but it’s possible. It’s also possible that it would limit your website to a narrower set of keywords. If people are searching for other search terms, it may cause you to have fewer search results. I don’t think the domain is a huge SEO factor and content is the main driver. Google is using AI (artificial intelligence) more than actual SEO ranking factors these days. So I personally wouldn’t bet the farm on it.
Tom
Hi Thomas, enjoyed your article, thanks. However I have noticed a case where it seems to be working to have multiple domains (and more or less duplicated websites) as in the case below.
They seem to have 3 (maybe more) websites all basically with the same thing. Not identical, but more or less. They often fill the whole first page of google rankings for some search terms (ie. try searching “sheepdog training videos”). Here are 3 of the domains that all look pretty similar, the technique seems to be working for them without google blacklisting them.
https://theworkingsheepdog.com/
https://sheepdog-training.com/
https://www.herding-dog-training-border-collie-sheepdog-dvd.com/
Just wondering why this is working for them and how to duplicate their results?!
Hi John, without doing an in-depth analysis of these websites, they do look like they have some different content, so it could still help them. Having identical content with different domains will not help.
are keyword domain names still attractive to google? for instance i own the domain tshirts(dot)in (in is india and i am from india)
i run a t-shirt company. so will this domain name help me in getting indexed fast on the top pages of google?
Hi Manoj, the keyword-based domain is a ranking factor, just as it is in the entire URL. Will it make things get indexed faster? No. But it can help if people are searching for t-shirts in India as long as the rest of your content is all about t-shirts.
Thank you very much for your reply Thomas.
You may have already covered this before and if so, I apologise, but…I use Yoast SEO on my blog and if I put a long tail keyword in the focus keyword box, it gets its knickers in a twist if I don’t use it in the slug, page title, and just about anywhere else I can enter text. Is there a plug in for WP that’s better for long tail keywords, or is it enough to use long tail keywords within the blog post itself, and satisfy Yoast with single keywords? Many thanks in advance!
Hi Arpita, great question. I’ll actually have an upcoming WordPress SEO course that will discuss this very subject. I’m not a fan of the red light/green light thing in Yoast because as you say, it gives false positives/negatives. It’s also easy to fake a green light when it’s really not doing you any good. Google doesn’t pay attention to the red light/green light, so just do your SEO the way you normally would and ignore it. To me, Yoast actually causes “over optimization” where your target keyword phrase is repeated too many times (title, description, URL, headers, etc.). Doing over optimization can actually hurt your ranking, so vary the keyword phrases, use synonyms, antonyms, semantically related phrases and Google will be much happier.
Hope that helps.
Tom
hii One of my client want to purchase 20 domains related to his keyword …. that is good or what type of issue will come or what is the main disadvantages And advantages about this type of activity
Akhildas, please read the article. It answers all your questions.
Hello Tom, thank you for writing this informative article. I have read through the entire page including all the comments and answers and I still have a couple of questions if you have the time to answer.
I currently have a service business website, and let’s say it’s a coaching business with a domain with no key word phrases in it http://www.wakeupwinchester.co.uk (a made up example). Due to our site content we are being ranked quite well by Google quite well, meaning; on page number one for ‘winchester coaching’ say but near the bottom and sometimes being pushed onto page two.
I am now creating a new site with some of the same content as the original site and when it’s finished I plan to delete the old site and have the new site as our main website. I plan to give a domain name to this new site that contains our keyword phrase, lets say wakeupwinchestercoaching.co.uk, with ‘winchester coaching’ as the phrase, and I’m thinking of creating another website with the domain wakupwinchestercoachingbooks.co.uk with a shop and written key word content but with a menu that is the same as on the wakupwinchestercaoching.co.uk site so that the two sites can link.
I realise that doing this will mean that I will have two sites to manage and I will need to pay the hosting fees for both, so I’m wondering if this is worth it for the sake of better SEO?
There is also the conundrum to add to the mix that we plan to expand in the future but we do need to do well in our current city for a good couple of years first.
So can you tell me, is it worth having two domains with specific keyword phrases attached to two separate sites that will both be indexed by Google for better SEO in the long term? Or am I better off to just not worry about the increased SEO that can come from domains and just title the new site with the domain wakeup.co.uk and put my energy into creating great key word content and other ways to improve its position on Google?
Please note, all the domains in this have been made up and I don’t know if they are real sites or not. If they are then it’s probably going to do wonders for their SEO to be listed on your site Tom!
Hi Jenny, In my opinion, you should put effort into creating more content than trying to create links from another website. There are a lot of factors when it comes to the value of links from other websites, and whether they count for any value at all: domain authority (how many other sites are linking to that linking site), page authority, age of the website and domain, domain diversity (getting links from many domains, not just one), and so on. Google has deemphasized keyword links, and prefers citations (company name links) now anyway. So with that, I’d keep all the content on one site.
Please make sure you 301-redirect ALL old links to the new site and URLs. Links to old URLs with a 301-redirect still count as a link to the new site. But if you don’t, then the old links die.
Good luck.
Tom
Hi,
Thank you for this very helpful article!
Could I just ask one question?
Example – I have one main site, lets say, example.co.uk and then I purchase a keyword domain, could I have just one page with that keyword domain where all links link back to my original domain?
Does that make sense?
So just create a landing page, and then link to my main site within that page?
Would that help SEO?
That obviously wouldn’t be a 301 though..
Thanks!
Hi Jodie, you can do that. It’s unlikely to help any though, and probably a waste of time and money for hosting and the domain itself.
Tom
Hi
I have a client who offers a number of services. Let’s say it’s an electrician and they have their own name ‘BillsElectrical’.
However they have managed to buy ‘commercialelectrican.com’ because ‘commercial electrician’ has good search volume.
If we make ‘commercialelectrican.com’ a one page site with information, images and keywords related to commercial electrical work, in theory, the site will begin to rank for commercial electrician.
However we would acknowledge that we are billselectrical and put some links there to billselectrical. We would also include the phone number for billselectrical – rather than a different phone number.
Is this going to cause any issues do you think?
Thanks
David
Hi David. It’s unlikely that the one-page site would rank for anything, certainly not for a term as generic as “commercial electric”. The domain name is only one of hundreds of ranking factors, and it’s farther down the list of importance. With a lot of types of businesses, such as electricians, plumbers, car mechanics, hair salons, and so on that typically have a small radius from which customers visit, the physical location of the business is far more important than the domain name. So anyone searching for “commercial electricians” are going to get served up a 3-pack map first of local electricians, then any electrician businesses that are close to them (based on their IP address).
Will this cause you any problems? None whatsoever. I doubt that it will do much good either.
Best of luck.
Tom
This is so very apt! Thanks from NIGERIA
Hi What about if you have multiple keyword rich domain names and rather that 301 them you change the name servers to point to the original website?
Hi Scott, then you have duplicate content on multiple domains, which is exactly what this article is saying not to do.