What to do with extra domain names

posted by Brian Search No Comments »

If you’ve ever bought a domain name through Go-Daddy, you know how relentless they are at trying to upsell you on extra services and additional domain names.  In a lot of cases, it makes sense to purchase those extra domain names (the .org, .net, .info, etc) in order to protect your brand name.  After all, if you experience any kind of success, someone is likely going to snap them up later to leech off your success or to sell them to you at a marked up rate.

Once yParked Pageou’ve got them, what’s the best thing to do with them?  Most of the time, people leave them “parked”.  That basically means that they sit there with a bunch of ads.  If anyone happens to navigate to the parked domain name and click on an ad, the registrar generally gets commission on the click - sometimes they’ll share the revenue with the domain owner. 

Having a lot of pages parked is not really very good for you.  Pages like that constitute what might be considered “web spam”, and having a lot of them registered to your name might give someone the inclination that you’re a web spammer, which makes your legitimate domains suspect in that person’s eyes.  Why should you care?  Well, that “person” might be a Google spider, and when your sites are suspect, they generally don’t rank high.  Remember, Google is an official domain registrar, so they have access to information that is not available to the general public.  In fact, they can see through private registrations.

A better alternative is to redirect all the traffic from your additional domains to your main website.  You have to be careful how you do this, though.  There are two basic ways to forward a domain to another domain and there’s really no standard name for each method.  Many domain name registrars refer to them as “masked” forwarding and “unmasked” forwarding, so I’ll use those terms here.

What’s the difference? 

Let’s say I’ve got two domain names - funkychairs.com and funkychairs.org.  The website is built on funkychairs.com and I want to forward funkychairs.org to funkychairs.com.  If I used masked forwarding, then pointing my browser to funkychairs.org will show me the same site as funkychairs.com, but the location bar of my browser will still read “funkychairs.org”.  Got that?  If I’m on funkychairs.org/diningRoom, my browser’s location bar will say just that, but I’ll be seeing the same page as funkychairs.com/diningRoom.

 Okay?

Now, if I used unmasked forwarding, and I point my browser to funkychairs.org, it will automatically forward to funkychairs.com.  My browser’s location bar will always read funkychairs.com.  It’s as though funkychairs.org doesn’t exist.  This is definately the way to go. 

Why?

If you use masked forwarding, it looks like there are two or more different websites with the exact same content.  In other words, there’s a website called funkychairs.org and it’s exactly the same as another website called funkychairs.com.  A casual user or a search engine would have little idea they were actually the same website.  If you use unmasked forwarding, you’re telling users (including search engines) that all the content at funkychairs.org is located at funkychairs.com.  There is only one website containing the content.

Search engines don’t like duplicate content.  It provides a bad user experience.  Imagine if you did a search for something and the first 10 results were all the exact same thing on 10 different websites.  If you didn’t like the first result you got, you surely wouldn’t like the next nine.  So, the search engines tend to filter out duplicate content, such that only one of the duplicate sites will appear in the search engine results.

Still no problem, right?  As long as one of your duplicate sites is ranking well, you won’t be complaining.  That’s true, but another problem is link cannibalization.  My earlier post about keyword cannibalization discussed two or more pages of a given web site competing against each other for the same keywords.  The same theory applies here.  Let’s say 10 people visit funkychairs.com.  They love the content there, so they link to it.  10 more people go to funkychairs.org.  They love the content there, so they link to it. 

Sounds good so far, what’s the problem?

Well, search engines generally look at links from other website as “votes” for the website that they are linking to.  Now, you’ve got two sites with 10 votes each.  Since they have duplicate content, one will be filtered out.  So, now you’ve got one website with 10 votes competing against your competition, which may have 15 votes.  If you use unmasked forwarding, you’ll have one site with 20 votes instead.  All other things being equal, this would be the difference between your competition ouranking you and you outranking your competition.

So, next time you buy a lot of domains, make sure you do the right thing and use unmasked forwarding.  It will save you a whole lot of trouble in the future. 

How to search the internet

posted by Brian Search No Comments »

Confused guyI was doing a little bit of keyword research the other day, and I came across some data about how many people are searching for instructions on how to search the internet.  At first, it might seem that such a search is a lot like walking up to someone and asking them how to talk.  The reality is, however, that there’s a lot more to internet searching than just typing a few words into the search query box of your favorite search engine.  For instance, did you know that searches on Google are not case specific?  If you search for Goats and goats, Google would return the same set of results (without even asking why you might be searching for goats in the first place).  Also, common words (like the, a, I, etc) are removed from your search.

Okay, I’ll admit that’s not exactly Earth-shattering stuff, but I bet you haven’t heard of a few of these tricks:

 1)  If you want to search for an exact phrase, use quotations marks.  For example, searching for “I know it’s smelly” will return several results containing that exact phrase.  Searching for that phrase without the quotes returns an entirely different set of results.

2)  Google and other search engines use the “AND” operator by default.  That is, they return only those results that are related to all of the words you’ve searched for (except the ”common” words discussed above).  If you want to search for either one word or another, use the “OR” operator.  For eample, if you’re looking for a new American sports car, you might search for: sports car Ford OR Chevrolet.  That will bring you a list of pages about sports cars that mention Ford, or mention Chevrolet.  If you did a search for: sports car Ford Chevrolet, you’d get a list of pages about sports cars that mention Ford and Chevrolet.

3)  Have you ever been to a website that didn’t allow you to search its pages?  No problem!  Let your favorite search engine do it.  You can restrict your searches to specific sites by using the “site:” modifier.  So, if I want to find an old shot of myself in my previous life as an oceanographer, I would go to Google, Yahoo!, or MSN and search for: brian darrow site:usf.edu.  This would result in a search for my name, but the only pages returned would be from the usf.edu domain.

4)  You can also eliminate things from your search.  You’ve probably been doing a lot of research about baseball lately and you’re sick and tired of those major league baseball sites cluttering your search results.  I feel your pain, and I give you the “-” operator.  Try searching for: baseball.  Then, search for: baseball -mlb.  Notice how the results are different.

5)  With Google, you can use the “~” symbol to include synonyms in your search.  Search for: ocean.  Then, search for: ~ocean.  Notice how the words “ocean” and “sea” are both highlighted in the results.  That’s similar to doing a search for: ocean OR sea, except that now you’re letting Google find the synonyms for ocean.  There may be others that you haven’t thought of.

For the most part, search engines are pretty smart.  You can usually just type a few words in the search box and get a pretty good list of websites that have exactly the information you’re looking for.  Every once in a while, though, you’ll run into one of those tricky searches and the 5 tips above just might come in handy.    

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