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Should I have two websites or one for SEO reasons?

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

EPhost WebsiteI met a criminal defense attorney while camping at San Elijo State Beach who asked me whether or not it is better to have a few smaller websites rather than one for search engine optimization reasons. I am often asked this question so I thought I would blog about it.

The general premise to be that the more websites you have the more success you might have in the search engines. In other words, you might be found in either more places or take two (or more) spots in the top 10 results of a particular keyword.  My knee-jerk reaction is that it is better to have one website and promote the heck out of it instead. However, the answer really depends on you and your situation. You might also be wondering if Google (or other search engines) have a problem with this tactic in general.

From a purely technical/logistical/cost perspective the reason I say to have one website is because I find most customers have enough trouble simply building and maintaining their website and two or more becomes a heap more trouble. Consider these factors: cost of outside help, time to write content, cost to advertise two websites etc .. Think of each website as a brick and mortar store- do you have the time to manage both? So if you are capable of overcoming these challenges, and you have a lot of time, then it may be feasible to have more than one website. But what does Google think?

The primary goal of an search engine (especially Google) is to hands-down have the best search results for a given query. That said, it doesn’t help if all of the results are riddled with duplicate websites spouting the same company, content or products. So given this simple idea, if you are going to have multiple websites then you should not duplicate your content. If you are developer like me you might say that with some simple programming I can reorganize my content so that it looks differently. My response to that is that search engines go deeper than that so you really better mix it up.  

Here is when I think (IMO) that having more websites MAY be warranted:

1) You have two businesses that are similar but truly different.
2) Your company has distinct product lines, each of which will fill an entire website full of content.
3) Your website has become so large that organizing it into multiple smaller websites is ideal.
4) You have language specific (localized) websites for which you would prefer to have country specific domains.
5) Your secondary websites are landing pages for a specific promotion or event.
6) You are required to have a landing page due to advertising issues.

Here are some reasons to have just one website:

1) You will spend less money for development and advertising..
2) You can focus all of your traffic on one website and have the benefit of cross-promotion.
3) You can just as easily syndicate your content across multiple mediums using RSS, Twitter, and Facebook.
4) It is entirely possible to focus your organic search results to come up on a variety of keywords.
5) You can deeply develop your backlink relationships and page rank to give your website a boost. Keep in mind that sub-domains are DIFFERENT websites– including using or not using WWW.

Here are the wrong reasons and some possible reprocussions of having multiple websites for the wrong reasons or doing it the wrong way:

1) You think you can murder your competition by filling up the search engine result pages (SERPS) with your company. This might backfire with your customers and piss off your competition who might try to make things hard for you. e.g. expose you to others, write bad reviews about you etc..

2) Duplicate content on your webpages might land one or more of these websites in Google’s secondary index. This is the area that Google puts supplementary content that it does not deem important. It is not easily seen by customers. Worst case, Google might sandbox or ban your company for some time.

3) The Stupid Reason: You have brained a business scheme whereby you will mass produce websites using stealth means, sophisticated technology to overwhelm your industry with your message. You have thought of everything including mutiple IP addresses from multiple hosts, multiple corporations, mixing up merged text as to appear different, and using different designs… for COMPLETE WORLD DOMINATION. LOL. I hear this about once a month and I just laugh. First, it never works. Second, if you took all that energy and worked on one website it would be a great website. Third, you are way late in the game to do this as it is an old tactic. Lastly, and the most obvious,  if it were that easy everyone would do it. e.g. your competition. Google was invented to weed out the crap.

So, the answer to the question of whether or not to have mutiple websites is this: If you are doing it for the right reasons and have the time, money and technical capability to produce and maintain quality websites with unique and interesting content then by all means do it. Otherwise, it is probably in your best interest work on developing your website with additional content, features and general usefullness.

Google Caffeine

Friday, December 18th, 2009

As many of you know Google Caffeine is already rolling its way across datacenters and will culminate to full deployment sometime after the holidays. Google Caffeine is a new indexing structure for Google and aims to improve the user’s searching experience by serving up new and more relevant search results. New “weight” will be placed upon certain key website elements to better rank websites and take emphasis off of other elements. Ideally, this will produce better, more accurate, search results. It’s speculated that improvements to Yahoo and especially Bing, which may be taking away some of the search traffic, is the reason behind the change.

For people who have been updating their websites regularly with fresh original content, and generally maintaining their website, there is little more that can be done aside from putting more emphasis on the key factors below. However, if you have been slacking a bit in publishing new content or using black-hat SEO techniques you may be due for a rude awaking. Content that’s not updated relatively frequently Google MAY consider abandoned or just plain outdated and rank you differently. No doubt Google would like to shack out websites using black-hat techniques.

An industry expert put it this way to me… If you have been practicing good clean SEO techniques and have been actively working on your website there is nothing to worry about. All of the same SEO techniques apply.

Here is a rundown of some of the expected changes. Some have been verified as accurate and some as speculation. A quick rundown on Natural Search Engine Listings can be found here.

1) Improved Indexing Speed and Depth:  Based on an interview I watched featuring Matt Cutts, a widely known Google Engineer, he stated that Caffeine should help Google index more pages faster. This may mean a focus on real-time results.  This may also mean that previously un-indexed data  may be uncovered. It could mean they won’t bother with slow pages and skip over them to get to more content.

2) Continued Emphasis on FRESH & ORIGINAL Content: This is really nothing new but apparently more emphasis will be placed on content. You should strive to achieve a few paragraphs of original content on each page. The content should be relevant to the product or service and targeted to your visitors. You should continue to develop additional content including video, audio, blogs, forums, press releases and start considering content for mobile devices. Your content should be brought up-to-date regularly and this should be reflected in your XML sitemaps. People (and Google) want current information- not outdated information from a year ago.

3) Site Load Times: Apparently one of the more talked about changes by Google has been more emphasis on site load times. The Official  Google Webmaster Blog talked about specifically about site load times and that faster sites provide a better experience for searchers. You may want to consider dropping links to 3rd party tools which may be slowing your site down from time to time. e.g. Advertising, hit counters and even hot linking to images or videos on YouTube on key pages. This is an often under estimated performance enhancing idea that can be employed easily. Other ideas to improve site load times are image resizing and compression, chunking out unneeded Flash elements, GZip compression, minifying CSS and cutting back on unneeded JavaScript to name a few.

4) META Title and Description: If you are not doing this already you have got some serious catching up to do. Web pages should have a unique descriptive META Tile tag  (under 20 words)  and a full sentence description in your META description tag. The title and description should pertain TO THAT PAGE and keeping within the overall theme of your website. Yes, you should have a META keywords tag too, while less or no emphasis has been placed upon that tag in recent years it’s still vital to have it. Your keywords should be relevant to that page, and should contain keyword phrases in order the most specific to the most general. However, don’t overdo it by repeating too many of the keywords.

5)  Highly Targeted Links (Incoming, Outgoing, Internal): A login time factor in getting ranked in Google has been in obtaining incoming links from websites with relevant content to your own. It’s unlikely this will disappear with Google Caffeine but will likely close the gap between what is relevant and what is not. So obtaining HIGH QUALITY RELEVENT links to your site will help you earn better ranking, but irrelevant links may hurt substantially. We’ve also heard that outbound links to relevant sites may become more important as well.   This isn’t to say that you should run out and add a bunch of links to other sites but it does tell you that Google will be placing more emphasis on where you are linking to and if it’s relevant.

An often forgotten aspect of linking is your internal linking structure. You should work towards consolidating “areas of information” within your site to their own specific directories. Then direct internal links within that “area of information” but not to other “areas of information”. Of course, you’ll need to link to your top level “home” pages, otherwise, you run the risk of orphaning some content. All in all, consider carefully your overall site structure and links.

6) Other Potential Factors: There has been a lot of speculation on the effects of Google Caffeine. Here is a list of some of them based upon comparing old result pages to the developer beta release of Caffeine.

a) Possibly more emphasis on exact match domains.
b) Possibly better understanding of related terms.
c) Possibly considering domain authority (age etc) more.

All in all Google hopes that this won’t shake things up too much and change the SERPS too much. I wouldn’t run around saying the sky is falling but I might consider cracking open the HTML editor and getting some work done on your website.

Google Caffeine Comparision Tool: http://www.comparecaffeine.com/
 (May be out-of-date)

New Website Launched

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Well finally. It seemed like it was never going to be finished. I guess it’s a reverse lesson in web development for me. It’s a lot harder to write content and come up with offers than it is to actually build the website. Unfortunately, there is still a lot of work to be done in all areas of the site.  Most especially, continuing to develop content and spruce up offers. I guess it’s going to be a work in progress for some time. Thankfully, it’s much better than before.

We are thinking to add a “community” area for customers and include a customer marketplace, and forums. Any thoughts would be appreciated.

Natural Search Engine Listings

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

I hope to be able to have time to ellaborate on this topic in the near future, but for now I have composed a few bulleted points to keep in mind when trying to get natural search engine listings. Afterall, this is the best kind of advertising for your business- FREE. They are in no particular order and all equally important.

  • Have about 300 on-screen words on your website’s main page (index page). Images and Flash cannot be read by the search engines- for the most part. We have noticed that some Flash is starting to get indexed when it contains text and embedded correctly. The text should contain your top 7-10 keywords.
  • When selecting keywords do some research as if you were one of your own customers looking for your product. Don’t try to target keywords that are too broad, nor so specific that they have no traffic.
  • Don’t try to conquer the world before your own neighboorhood. Work your way out. Start local, then regionally, then nationallyand finally internationally. You will be surprised just how well you will do locally.
  • Make sure your website includes an HTML “sitemap” and that there is a link to it on your index page.
  • Make sure you have a Google formatted (XML) site map and make sure that you have registered your site with them using their webmaster tools.
  • Make sure your website code has all of the proper HTML elements. e.g. META tags and properly formated.
  • Bury javascript inside Javascript (.JS) pages. Search engines read ALL of the text on your website. Having unneeded words (even in the code) will convolute the importance of your primary keywords.
  • Don’t waste time with tricks. Just write complelling interesting content forcused on “here’s how” not “buy now”. If people like what you have to say, they will linnk to your website or quote you.
  • Stay active on the internet and participate in industry discussion forums, community portals and other sites where you can obtain a link pointing back to your website.
  • Start your own blog and or forum like this one. Hopefully, someone will begin to link to your own content. Ideally, so will search engines.

By following this basic advice you will see an in crease in traffic to your website and increased visibility in the search engines.

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