Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
I launched a year ago my website on the .com domain.Right now my business is expanding and I need to publish the site on the .co.uk domain.
Since there are actually the same products, I need to import from the .com all the descriptions and additional information. To keep it short...probably the .co.uk will have only 10% original content (prices in pounds :) ).
My main concern in this case is that one of my websites (or even both) will be penalized by Google.
Unfortunately I can't alter the contents since the products are the same...only the price is set in pounds.
Have you any advice to avoid this...if indeed it applies in my case?
I must appologise if this question was asked before on this forum, but I was not able to find it yet.I appreciate any advice or link to a previous post.
PS - The domain name is exactly the same (x.com and x.co.uk)
Thanks all!
I just now made the appropriate changes (noindex nonfollow) adn now should be all good.
My question is this. If I was "duplicate" what penalties have I had so far.
Now since I am good, what positive consequences and when should I feel it?
Now that I am in compliance, could I hope for better traffic? And when will I see the change?
Thank you.
Thanks for all the answers so far!
If the user is from the US set cookies to display all prices in $. If the user is from the UK set prices to be shown in £.
If you can't detect that have a front page asking where the user is from. If the users miss that keep displaying a header menu option asking the same.
No need to run two sites. Just master the .com
* Do a 301 from the .co.uk to the .com
* Gain good UK links (this indicates to Google that the site is relevant to the UK too - although you may still lose out on the small proportion of searches that are for 'sites from the uk')
* Create a visible (but small) US and UK flag or drop down box that switches prices to/from USD/GBP (but using the same URL's for either price - you may need to set up apache to parse html as php if your pages were static then add the neccesary code - or use htaccess to internally rewrite htm pages to the new php counterpart)
* Ask more questions as you go
Thanks for the feedback!
Google should keep the .co.uk domain in the index if you use a 302 - and rank it in UK searches. The UK based links will help it gain this relevancy
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>> And I still need to use the pound sign since in UK this is the official currency. <<
* Ahem * See ISO 4217 [google.com], for just what you require these days.