Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
I've read that being recognised as a UK site by DMOZ and / or having links from other recognised UK sites may help. Therein lies the problem though....it MAY help. Which means if it doesn't, by the time you find out you've lost another 6 to 9 months!
In another thread I've been trying to work out how significant searches are on Google for UK only results when searching on c.co.uk. No answers as yet...I live in hope someone has done some reseach into this! At the same time I'm trawling the web to see what I can find independently - if I come up with anything I'll let you know.
One of my sites is Spanish (hosted in Spain), and the number of users selecting the "pages from Spain" option in Google numbers between 15 and 20%.
This, then, is the potential increase in visitors if you can get Google to recognise the site as local.
I have many customer sites with .co.uk still on my server in the US and they dont have any UK only search problems, just the .com, it works of the ip address.
I've done a lot or reading these last two days and whilst I have found some people with a US hosted site and a .com who perform well in UK only searches on g.co.uk, they are very, very rare. Generally you need a .co.uk domain name or to be hosted in the UK. Certainly that's where I'd focus for a more certain result.
It seems fair to knock UK figures down a bit due to language
Maybe not. Bear in mind that unlike google.co.uk, google.es offers 2 extra options ... "pages in Spanish" and "pages in Spain". I'm only talking about the "pages in Spain" option. My .com site was already appearing in the "pages in Spanish" SERPs when it was hosted in the US - now it appears in all 3 options, and the 15-20% increase is only for the "from Spain" option.
Any ideas on the timelag between moving hosts (US to UK) and then appearing in the regional (UK) only results? I'm guessing potentially a month or two...time enough for Google to crawl it, determine that it's now in the UK and hence list us in those results too. Or....& I hope not, but the other option is it's as long as it can take a new site to get listed. Any experiences on this?
Good luck
Search results on Google.com (carried out in the US from a US located IP) are largely .com US based sites with a few other country extension sites. How does Google place a bias on US only sites when there is no widely used country specific US extension and - as energylevel says - many UK sites in particular use a .com TLD AND host in the US - making both TLD and IP Address a poor measure of geo-location?
If you look at it the another way - take two sites - identical in every way (PR, no of back links, topic, hosting location) - but one is a .co.uk and one is a .com, which has the greater chance of ranking in a Google.com search carried out in the US?
I agree with whats been said on here having been throught it so many times with clients, it is best to host sites in the country you are trying to target. However there are hosting companies out there who can assign country specific IP address' which works just as well.
A company called one and one will give you an IP address from any country you ask for, but the servers are actually based in Germany.
I have used them for a few different clients now, one spanish and a couple UK and it seems to do the trick.
Nial