Guidelines for a second website business domain
-
Hi There,
A client is setting up a second website selling the same products from a separate domain with the same descriptions etc. The site will have a separate URL, but will administered from the same CMS. The only difference is the new site has only one brand instead of several on the main site.
E.G The main site sells all plumbing brands, the second site just one brand.
Your thoughts and advice for best practise would be much appreciated.
Andy (Marz Ventures)
-
Guess we have to set up a second CMS, content etc.
OK... submit to them.
If I ran a plumbing site and one brand tried to tell me how to run my biz I would do an analysis and determine where they fall into the market importance. I might decide to....
A) quit selling their CrappyBrand Plumbing Supplies
B) quit selling all other brands and focus on their CadillacBrand Plumbing Supplies
C) continue as I am and see if they cancel me
D) build a little outhouse to sell their crappy stuff
E) keep my current site and put a lot of effort into a site that sells only their brand
Consider doing an analysis before you spend any effort to kiss their feet. My crystal ball says there are going to be hundreds of sites selling their CrappyBrand Plumbing Supplies and nobody is going to be making good money from them.
The aim is not to manipulate the rankings,
Your client might not be trying to manipulate rankings. But the plumbing manufacturer is trying to flood the SERPs and manipluate vendors. My decision making would not be.... "Yes Sir".... or even binary.
-
Hi EGOL,
Thanks for your time on this. The reason for the second site is the company have been approached to represent a specific brand as an official brand distributor who want the products on a specific website.
I concur with your thoughts although I do feel my client is not attempting to manipulate Google, but the opportunity to be an official representative for a brand is one they are understandably keen to take.
Guess we have to set up a second CMS, content etc.
Thanks again.
Andy.
-
HI Andy,
The default answer would be this is not advised. The reason being is even though the second site is more focused you still are competing with yourself for rank on all the focused items. What is also alarming is that the statement "with the same descriptions etc". Now you are running into duplicate content issues. Search Engines try to give credit to the original author, when you put duplicate content on the web the search engines get to pick who the original author is. Lastly, you said it is going to be managed by the same CMS, which can mean that it maybe on a different domain but it will be on the same server, making it far more likely that it will considered duplicate content.
That is the default answer, but there are cases where it can make sense to run two websites that sell the same product. In fact that is what I manage. In our case, we are the manufacturer and a distributor. The manufacturing site doesn't sell products just explains how they are made and refers to the distribution sites for low volume orders. While the distribution site acknowledges the manufacture's site and refers custom applications back to them. These are two different classes of customers.
Another example would be in the service industry, lets say you run a concrete and cement mixing service. You may sell certain brands of concrete and cement and also physically deliver this product to job locations. Delivering cement can be an industry in and of itself, if you offer this service as standalone (bring your own cement) then it would make sense to run two websites, one offering the deliver service and one offering the actual product. In both cases you can cross reference each other for potential vertical integration.
Okay, now for standard practices. If you're going to run two domains pick two completely different host. You want your domains on different C-blocks. Second it is very strongly suggested that you do NOT use the same descriptions, write new content for each site. Lastly evaluate if the time and effort you spend to create a second site could not be better spent updating, optimizing, promoting your first site, it just may turn out that re-focusing efforts on a single site wins in the long run.
Remember Google is getting smarter every day they want to provide the very best results for every search that is entered into their system. If you can be creative and make your site the go to site for "whatever" then Google will eventually recognize that and return you as #1. Google is being proactive looking for business and people who are trying to trick them into serving erroneous top results. Gone are the days of "build it and they will come" now it is "build the best and they will come".
I hope this helps you,
Don
-
Thanks Tim,
The aim is not to manipulate the rankings, but that a brand have asked them to sell products for them on a separate domain. Many businesses have duplicate trading names, but we are saying Google does not account for this and my client can be penalised.
Tricky one when you are not intentionally trying to manipulate rankings.
If we go the root of canonical tags would I be right in assuming we kill any chance for the new domain to rank?
Thanks for your time.
Andy.
-
a second website selling the same products from a separate domain with the same descriptions etc.
Duplicate content. BAM! One site will probably be filtered from the SERPs.
If they are linked together Google will spot that and totally kill one site almost immediately. Google has been killing duplicate content sites, linked together for about ten years. Ten years.
Even if the sites are not linked together google will realize that there are two identical product pages competing in the SERPs and filter one of them.
Your thoughts and advice for best practise would be much appreciated.
If client's original site is not absolutely dominating the SERPS. The time and money spent on a second site usually returns a lower ROI than working on the original site.
This client is attempting the lazy approach. Just toss up duplicate pages and think they will make buckets of money. Google figured that out ten years ago. Everybody was doing that. Google figured that out to keep their SERPs clean.
I bet if client improved the current site by sharpening optimization, improving product descriptions, adding better photos, adding "how to do it" articles. This client is in plumbing, the perfect business to produce informative content for accomplishing a repair and recommending the parts, tools, supplies and books needed. There is where I would spend my time.
-
Although it may be a one product site, personally I would avoid running your new website whilst using the same content as this is going to start causing you duplicate content issues, this dupicate content is then possibly going to land your sites with penalties and may cause you to drop in the organic serps.
If you are adamant in doing this I would suggest marking your new sites content with rel canonical tags that reference your current site as the orignal authorative content location.
rel="canonical" href="http://www.domain.com/product-page/" />
However; my absolute personal recommendation would be to create your new site on a seperate host with a seperate CMS, and provide it with absolutely unique content this way the site will stand on its own two feet and likely do well with incurring duplicate penalties.
Hope that helps.
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
-
Ranking issue for new website
Hi all, I have got a specific SEO challenge. 6 months ago, we started to build an eCommerce site (located in the UK). In order to speed up the site launch, we copied the entire site over from an existing site based in Ireland. Now, the new UK site has been running for 5 months. Google has indexed many pages, which is good, but we can't rank high (position: between 20-30 for most pages). We thought it was because of content duplication in spite of different regions. So we tried to optimize the pages for the UK site to make them more UK-related and avoid content duplication. I've also used schema to tell google it's a UK-based site and set up Google my business and got more local citations. Besides, If you could give me any suggestions, it'd be perfect.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Insightful_Media
Thank you so much for your time and advice.1 -
How do I redirect my old PHP website to my new Java website?
Please could you help? My old website is written in php. I've created a new design of the website in Java. I'll be using the same domain name though. example.com and I'd like to pass my link juice to my new redesigned website. When I turn the domain name to point to my new website how do I make sure pages that are ranked in google that don't exist on my new website transfer 301 from my old website to a similar page on my new website. Old Website Example example.com/bootcampuk.php New Website Example example.com/bootcamps.jsp Many Thanks, Rob
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | puamethod0 -
How to switch brand domain and address previous use of domain
We recently acquired a new domain to replace existing as it better fits our brand. We have little/no organic value on existing domain so switching is not an issue. However the newly acquired domain was previously used in a different industry and has inbound links with significant spam scores. How can we let Google know that these links are not valid for our business and start rebuilding reputation of the domain? Disavow tool?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Marlette0 -
Redirection Effects on Sub Domain
Hi, I would try to summarize my query through an example. Lets say site A (www.siteA.com) have two sub domain (subdomain1.siteA.com & subdomain2.siteA.com) and another site B ( www.siteB.com ) have no sub domain. Due to some obvious reason we need re direct the site site A (www.siteA.com) to site B ( www.siteB.com ) and one of the sub domain (subdomain1.siteA.com) to site B (subdomain1.siteB.com). Now the question is that in case of ( subdomain2.siteA.com ) can we keep the sub domain to site A even though site A has been re directed to site B ? Reasons for keeping this can be traffic, earnings etc. Is it possible to keep it like that or provision for further optimization? Plz help.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | ITRIX0 -
Is there value in keeping a microsite for a business that has unique domains for each of their locations?
I'm taking over a site with multiple domains that are almost entirely duplicate content. The business has a main site, then 5 different location sites with unique domain names, a slightly different homepage, then exact duplicate for the rest of the site. Should I get rid of the individual location domains entirely, and just 301 redirect to pages on my main domain? Or might it be worth keeping a unique microsite online at each of the location domains (with one general location page on the main url, then the location-specific info on the microsite)? Currently, some of the location domains rank better than the main one, and in other areas the main one outranks the location domain.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | irapasternack0 -
301 Redirecting multiple domains to brand new domain
Hi guys, I have read quite a bit of stuff on 301 redirects after Penguin. Hoping someone could help me out. im looking at a way to do a legit 301 redirect without passing the penalty. I have acquired two businesses, business1 and business2, that both had websites that were hit by penguin. Ive anaylsed there backlinks and theres a lot of spammy forum links and comments and I was also informed they were both using buildmyrank. A side note, buiness2 only started using BMR after it noticed business1 have large amounts of high PR links. business1.com was ranking at position 1 till the penguin hit. Business2.com was ranking around page 2 I work in the same arena as these two businesses and didnt generate any business via the internet. When these 2 businesses failed (due to loss of rankings and traffic) i decided to take them over. What I am thinking of doing is 301'ing both business domains to my brand new, zero links, domain which will be the name of my new company. I will combine the content from both sites, around 1000 pages, in to the new one. So my question is, does 301'ing multiple domains, that target the same keywords, and operate in the same niche, look less "spammy" then 301'ing 1 domain? I'm trying to look at it in the eyes of google. It is a legit merging of businesses. Thanks for your help, really appreciate your time
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | JohnPeters0 -
Domain migration strategy
Imagine you have a large site on an aged and authoritative domain. For commercial reasons the site has to be moved to a new domain, and in the process is going to be revamped significantly. Not an ideal starting scenario obviously to be biting off so much all at once, but unavoidable. The plan is to run the new site in beta for about 4 weeks, giving users the opportunity to play with it and provide feedback. After that there will be a hard cut over with all URLs permanently redirected to the new domain. The hard cut over is necessary due to business continuity reasons, and real complexity in trying to maintain complex UI and client reporting over multiple domains. Of course we'll endeavour to mitigate the impact of the change by telling G about the change in WMC and ensuring we monitor crawl errors etc etc. My question is whether we should allow the new site to be indexed during the beta period? My gut feeling is yes for the following reasons: It's only 4 weeks and until such time as we start redirecting the old site the new domain won't have much whuffie so there's next to no chance the site will ranking for anything much. Give Googlebot a headstart on indexing a lot of URLs so they won't all be new when we cut over the redirects Is that sound reasoning? Is the duplication during that 4 week beta period likely to have some negative impact that I am underestimating?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Charlie_Coxhead0 -
Buying a banned domain
Hello all, I've found a exact match keyword domain that I'm able to buy. Problem is that I'm under the impression it might have been banned by google, currently it is only showing adsense without content. The site can't be found using the cache: or site: parameters in Google and the PR is 0. What are your experiences on buying a banned domain and how can I double check if the domain is banned? This blogpost suggests I should not buy it, any other opinions? Thanks. Hellemans
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | hellemans0