Forum Moderators: open
I had a look around the forums, but couldn't find the "answer" to this question, so here we go.
Using the key phrase "keyword1 keyword2" on Google.com presents a series of results, which up until the 2nd page of results are US addresses ie .com, .net etc. Upon reaching the 2nd page the results start to include addresses such as .co.uk and .org.au. Is anyone aware of whether there is a Google order of preference as to which domain name extensions are listed?
I have submitted the domain name www.keyword1-keyword2.co.nz ( which is well optimised! ) and I am waiting for inclusion, however I was wondering whether being at the bottom of the world means that I don't have a chance getting ranked well in Google.com.
Food for thought anyway.
Cheers :)
Ben.
On the surface there is no preference for any TLD, be it a gTLD or ccTLD. It's all about links.
It gets more interesting if we look at the user. The question is which user gets which serps?
I would not be surprised to see a NZ user getting serps favouring co.nz sites. I don't see at this point a US user getting serps favouring .com sites though.
My bad. In that case, my answer is if someone searches for "widget safety", why would think that a .com would be a better site than a .ca? The only way Google might sensibly consider a preference for a .com is if they had tweaked the algo to spot searches that appeared to be obviously commercial. Like "widget sales" or "buy widgets."
>I would not be surprised to see a NZ user getting serps favouring co.nz sites. I don't see at this point a US user getting serps favouring .com sites though.
Problem with this idea is that if I am in NZ, no reason to think a NZ site would have better results for "widget safety."
Obvious reason why Google wouldn't want to give preference to .coms is that this *isn't* the preferred extension for a non-commercial site.
You'll find a lot of the ones you refer to as .org also. Surely commercial sites strongly favor the .com. Thus, any algo tweak favoring .coms will naturally tend to favor commercial sites.