Moz's official stance on Subdomain vs Subfolder - does it need updating?
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Hi Nima - that seems like a big swing for a move. I might double-check that all the redirects are correct and that engines are indexing the new pages properly. Google Webmaster Tools may be helpful there, too.
As far as timeframes for seeing traffic dip and recover, yes, we have observed that - it ranges from 1-4 months. You can see more about that here: https://moz.com/blog/rebrand-or-redirect-my-site-consolidate-multiple-sites-whiteboard-friday and in the comments.
Wish you all the best!
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Hello
any change on this subject of sub domains since Google shared they treat all as one?
thanks
Guy C
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Nope. We still don't believe them and still have overwhelming evidence that Google doesn't consistently treat all pages on multiple subdomains the same way they do URLs on the same subdomain. They've said for years that it doesn't matter, but the evidence and data are clear. Putting content on multiple subdomains will almost certainly cause it to perform worse in Google than keeping it all on the same subdomain.
The comments here show some nice examples of folks who have moved their content to a single sub/root domain and seen big traffic bumps from search as a result: https://moz.com/blog/subdomains-vs-subfolders-rel-canonical-vs-301-how-to-structure-links-optimally-for-seo-whiteboard-friday
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So, this means, there will be no sub-domains in future?
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Hi Rand,
I am working with a bank that would like to rank as many parts of the company site as possible for the company name. While I understand the results on subdomains vs. subfolders, the question is, if we go with subfolders, will google rank multiple parts of a site within the top 10 results thinking that preference is giving 1 spot to the named URL.
it is better to structure this as:
Using subfoldersamericanbank.comamernicanbank.com/careersamericanbank.com/reviews
or (use subdomains)
americanbank.comcareers.americanbank.comreviews.americanbank.com
or (set up new domains)
americanbank.comamericanbankcareers.comamericanbankreviews.com
Thanks for your perspective.
Jeff
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If you don't mind the loss of ranking signals between the subdomains/domains, and are simply seeking to dominate the search results through owning multiple positions, separate domains are the best way to go. Subdomains can work for this, too, but are less consistently treated as separate sites, and Google may change that in the future.
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Thanks Rand, appreciate the quick response.
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Rand,
I'm in the midst of a conversation with web security folks who state that a sub-directory (e.g. website/blog) that points to a blog like WordPress via a reverse proxy bypasses the "same-origin policy" and puts the site at "high risk".
If we take the standard security "hardening" measures like quality managed hosting with blog files kept separate from customer information, regular updates, trusted themes, vetted plugins, backups, etc., shouldn't we mitigate that risk?
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Yeah - my blog - moz.com/rand has the Wordpress install on Moz's site, on the same servers as the rest of our domain, and we've implemented security protocols that make it very hardened. There's lot of WP security stuff out there that can help, and a talented sec-engineering team should be able to set it up with a minimum of problems. Many of the world's biggest companies run Wordpress, so there's lots of pre-existing protocols.
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hi,
I saw that MOZ is treating equaly the Domain Authority score for root domain and subdomains. Is it entirely truth? So far you were desciribing the change for the content (blog, forum), but how the situation is different when the case is about localization?
I was compering two types of site localization. One under uk.domain.com and the other at domain.co.uk. In MOZ the subdomain uk.domain.com and domain.com have the same value for the Domain Authority. And whenever compared domain.com to local domains (co.uk, de, fr) their DA is always lower. Is it then MOZ algorithm assumption or is there higher value to put localizations under subdomain? It would be first time I hear that subdomain has higher authority than local domain.
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Our scores for DA are only calculated on the root domain, but that doesn't mean different subdomains inherit all the ranking abilities of the root domain they're on. In fact, quite the opposite is true, which is why we still strongly suggest using a single subdomain on your root domain to host all the content, rather than splitting things up on multiple subdomains.
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Thanks Rand for detailed answered.
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Hi, Rand - 1 year later. Do you still recommend strongly folder over subdomain?
I have three separate websites that I have planned on merging into one. I recently acquired a strong domain ( stronger than my existing ones ) & after much deliberation, I have decided to move them together into one domain.
Site 1) 1 Forum - Around since 2007 - Originally VBulletin, last year migrated to discourse.
Site 2) E-commercece Magento Site - Around since 2010
Site 3) WordPress - Blog & Articles - Around since last year - Currently using the new ( Main Domain I want to use )
After a lot of research and White Board Fridays, I was thinking this would be my best bet:
- newdomain.com - Merged WordPress & Magento CMS Page.
- newdomain.com/ forum <-- Will move my forum content & Install to the new domain.
- newdomain.com/ store <-- Will move my Ecommerce content & Install.
Between my developer and I, we have our heads around how to handle the technical aspect of the move, 301s to the new location etc.
But one area we want to research before pulling the trigger ( we haven't found much data on this )
My Main Question: What is the possible penalty coming for shopping websites vs. content-driven websites, and possibility that forum-based content hosted on the same domain might cause another penalty to be applied to the other content on the domain.
My Developer Says: In recent years, we noticed that forum content had been penalized in favor of editorially reviewed content when this is identified by search engines.
What big hiccups would / could we encounter from combining these 3 types of platforms into one site? Many thanks for any direction or insight. -
Hi Shop-Sq,
A) I think merging the domains is almost definitely the right move, so long as you do it right (get the redirects nailed, don't have any performance issues, update the links correctly, etc).
B) I don't believe there's any penalty coming for shopping sites that also happen to host forum content or blog content. The only risk is if a lot of the site becomes (or is) cruft, meaning low-engagement/low-value content Google doesn't want in its index or searchers never click on/stay on.
C) We have not seen what your developers describe. Some forums haven't done well, others have done quite well (e.g. Moz's Q+A has benefited a lot over the last few years). I don't believe any hiccups you encounter will be because the types of content are unique, but rather because of technical issues, missteps, or content that doesn't help searchers and doesn't perform in Google (and all three should be avoidable).
D) Yes. We/I still recommend subfolders over subdomains. More strongly than ever actually. We've got some new evidence that Google judges content on a subfolder level, hence subdomains may not inherit all the rankings abilities of subfolders/other subdomains on the same domain.
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Hey Rand,
For international geotargeting would you recommend NOT using Sub Folders?My website lists internships in 60 different countries which are divided into 60 Sub Folders......example:
www.example.com/us/ and www.example.com/de/ Would it be better to change all 60 Sub Folders over to Top Level Domain extensions or even Sub Domains? (Website currently has 15,000 pages divided into 60 sub folders. Has a DA 44)Thanks for the great advice in this post
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Either can work well - subfolders are a fine solution for many. There's a slight bit more advantage in country-targeting with TLD extensions, but you lose a lot in link equity and ranking ability, so it's a tradeoff you'll have to choose between.
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Thanks,
That's what I had hoped. I will stick with the sub folders for now.
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Rand,
Will search engines penalize a slow moving migration from subdomain to subdirectory, where a site had both blog.domain.com and www.domain.com/blog, even if there was no duplicate content? Thought being, all new blogs get posted under the subdirectory and we slowly migrate blogs from the subdomain.
Thanks.
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Does anyone have insight into the session percentage lift for their blog or their site after making the move from a subdomain blog to a subfolder? I'm seeing a lot of people talk about improvements in rankings for keywords on their blog and site but haven't seen anyone list out session numbers to go with that data.
Thanks