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On all the other search engines it appears to be no problem. We also have another website which has a subsection on the same topic as the .co.uk and .com, but with a different name, and though it is hard to tell on 2 keywords if there is any penalization, with 3 keywords, it appears in the top 10 of the serps with the .co.uk or the .com
Will changing the IP make a difference to the .com?
We are seeing a similar thing. In our case we have two sites one of which expands on a subsection of the other.
in this case we were seeing that the expanded site has pretty much dropped from the serps.
We have deleted all duplicate content, are in the process of taking out all links (the original site used the back end of the expanded site) and were thinking about switching IP.
does anyone know if this is too little too late?
Any advice would be great.
Marra
are they targetting diferent marketplaces? if not then its quite simply spam, however you wish to dress it.
If you are targetting the same market with .co.uk and the .com, then it maybe worth looking a completely different approach for what you are trying to achieve with the sites!
Google may define sites to be owned by the same person if the first 3 octets of the sites' IP addresses are the same (e.g. 123.123.123.****).
This was the reason I thought of changing the .com IP address.
>Will changing the IP make a difference to the .com?
No!
I disagree. If google has identifyed the .co.uk and the .com as being the same site/company it may look at the ip to decide which country is more relevant. If your server is in the UK it may have decided to take the .co.uk. Are there any pages for the .com listed on a site: search? If not, then this could be the problem
Other areas where the ip may be effecting the rankings is if all your links in come from the same ip. This won't look good.