Forum Moderators: phranque
Host a .com domain in the USA when the site is targeted at a UK audience and you may find that the site does not do quite as well on gdotcodotuk, host a .co.uk in the USA and its not a problem. I have sites hosted in the USA on .com domains and they do ok but maybe they would do better hosted the UK.
If you're registering a domain through a host they might have difficulty dealing with a name from a "foreign" country, but if you've got your name and are merely transferring it to a new host then there should be no problem.
What DOES have relevance is what your host provides as far as usability, functionality, space, options, speed, uptime, and "perks" - which catchall varies of course, according to what you're looking for.
I went from a local (to me) extremely expensive US host to a highly NON-local extremely affordable Canadian host - and the only thing I've seen that's changed enough to measure is the actual speed of the servers - these are WAY faster than the old ones. (Okay - the fee structure is obvious by the fact that it costs less too, but ANYONE would see that, right?) Oh - I get way more fun things to play with too: php, mysql, apache, perl, ssh, mailing list, etc. The local guy I WAS with didn't let me use any of that because it was a "security risk".... *sigh*
There was a thread in the supporters forum about this. I experienced this lately by doing a single word search for "school". I had an AdWords ad show up for a school in my locality while the person I was on the phone with (2000 miles away) at the time had no Adwords/Sponsored listings. The only way Google could do this is by my cable modem ISP and/or my IP. I do not allow cookies from Google, and not running the toolbar.
Everything shows up just the same ...corse that might be cos the Quebecois speak ( sort of ) French ...
Only downside is the poutine in yer logs!
- Grant
Would US users experience decreased performance by moving the server from the US to Canada?
No, server performance is going to be based on the datacenter (pipes/connections), server config, and of course how many other sites and/or traffic on the particular server. The servers we moved to seem much quicker than when hosted at a very well known datacenter. Best way to check is ping the server and ask if you can download a few big files.. Your results will always vary somewhat depending on the path your location takes to the server.
We have a few sites where we have 2 slightly different sites (to avoid duplication problems), one on our dedicated server in the US and another hosted in Canada. This gets us around the potential problems.
What amazes me is how many Canadians actually search for Canadian pages only, not realizing that they are blocking out 98% of what Google has to offer. I didn't discover this until a few of my clients were complaining about their sites not turning up on Google where they were doing well on my searches.
I error on doing well in the US as this is a large part of my business. Looking forward to more comments on this thread.