Site is database driven and has around 400 categories and 40,000 widgets in all. Most of these products pages have no content other than
widget make
widget model number
widget price
ie just barebones content.
Now what I am contemplating is building another site on a .co.uk domain. But the only fear is a google penalty for duplicate content because of very little scope for adding/modifying content.
So to overcome duplication if I add some fluff on the second site product pages, do I stand a chance to deceive google ;)
(and perhaps increase/decrease prices of widgets by a pound each to avoid price duplication)
(Hope Google Guy is not around ;) .. just in case he is .. GG a site with .com domain which is listed in DMOZ UK directory is not counted by google as UK site .. and we can't leave it after 2 years of building PR .. I wonder what stops google from keeping those in)
Any alternatives?
But some are filtered out. Clearly Google's regional filter is flawed - there have been plenty of threads about this in the past. Most recently, it seems that the last update saw an additional level of erroneous filtering - see these threads:
Google getting locations wrong from IP addresses [webmasterworld.com]
Google UK - still old results [webmasterworld.com]
What jaski describes is the inevitable consequence of the move towards regional results (whether correctly filtered or not). A single site cannot now expect to do well on google.com AND google.co.uk (or on Froogle and google.co.uk). As more searchers start to specify 'pages from the UK', it is clear that a site targeting a UK market must be included in this data set. But if you also want to target US customers ... well, a multi-site stategy seems the obvious option. The difficulty is, as jaski outlined, how to differentiate your content sufficiently so that you don't trip duplicate content filters, gain new DMOZ listings, etc.
I'm sure this isn't what Google intended, but how else can an online business now target multi-national markets via the SERPs except by building a series of country specific sites?
>>(Hope Google Guy is not around ;)<<
I hope he is! He has commented on the regional issue, in the context of Froogle, but not conclusively:
Question msg: #287 [webmasterworld.com]
Googleguy reply msg: #303 [webmasterworld.com]
Do you have links from DMOZ UK section, etc.
Exactly.
Listed in
dmoz.org/Regional/Europe/United_Kingdom/Business_and_Economy/Shopping/
bit further down in this tree ..
Moving hosting to UK will be a good amount of hassle and cost .. not sure at this juncture if its wise to try that ...
widget make
widget model number
price
are pulling in traffic.
I think there is hardly any room for creativity for content modification .. cannot change widget make .. cannot modify model number .. that leaves only the price to play with... and 40K soooooo.... similar pages on two sites are bound to attract a Google penalty IMHO.
If I use different CaSe lettering for widget make and model number .. will those qualify as separate.. hmm.. though I don't think so because google is case insensitive in searches.
Just to satify my curiosity I tried several searches on google.co.uk with the UK filter and it seems to work well.
If you host the site in the USA, it may be less hassle to move to a UK based server than it is to set up a new mirror dot co dot uk site
will the new site get penalty .. or can the original one be affected as well .. because if its the former then I can well take the risk .. nothing much to lose ... but if its the latter then I cannot. .. ahum..is this a question that I should ask on the google forum?
Thanks
Jaski
but what about Google results sent elsewhere, such as AOL and Yahoo which seem to use simpler filtering
Those both appear to work fine with my dot com sites that are UK specific and are on UK ISP
I have had problems with Alta Vista in the past, having had to correspond to get acceptance. On checking just now, those are fine too.
Thankyou all for contributing. I now know all the pros and cons that can be known beforehand .. will weigh them well before I do any thing.
Thanks
Jaski
Concerning the valid point of Yahoo uk and Aol uk omissions,
we have partly covered this by PPC, overture uk (aol uk) and espotting (yahoo uk) which is cheaper for our current low level of referrals than setting up another site.
One thing I discovered when looking at this issue was that our UK host would host another site and "point it" to the main site for 50 quid. Couldn't seem to get to the bottom of what this is all about.
Anybody know the pros and cons?