Administrator
Administrator
- Joined
- May 18, 2016
- Messages
- 84
If someone manage three websites which sell same products across three domains, but with a distinct selling approach, price structure, target audience, etc. Does Google take this as spammy or black hat?
It is not so bad because the domains are distinguished by layout, selling approach and structure. The most notable statement is that they have only three domains. If you have 300 domains or 3,000 domains, you
can get to a large number of domains which could be crowding up the search results. It creates a worst user experience.
As you say, you sell same products across three domains. If you were selling like men's clothing on one, and women's clothing on second and kids clothing on third. It is not bad to have different domains for every product.
It makes sense when you have small number of domains for very normally separable reasons. But it seems strange to sell the same products on each separate domains. If they appear to be similar, it will look strange for the visitors. Especially when you are about to start more than three domains.
If you have one domain, you have got the time to build a reputation for that domain. If you have 50 or 100 domains, you will hesitate to put as much as interest in each
individual domain. May be, they will have interest in the beginning, but later they will have the temptation
to auto generate content. Or they just try to combine a bunch of feeds.
If you visit one domain versus another domain, it seems incredibly
cookie cutter comparing the two domains. The users will hate it and
start to complain. So one should keep these things in mind, if you are about to go from one domain to multiple domains.
It is not so bad because the domains are distinguished by layout, selling approach and structure. The most notable statement is that they have only three domains. If you have 300 domains or 3,000 domains, you
can get to a large number of domains which could be crowding up the search results. It creates a worst user experience.
As you say, you sell same products across three domains. If you were selling like men's clothing on one, and women's clothing on second and kids clothing on third. It is not bad to have different domains for every product.
It makes sense when you have small number of domains for very normally separable reasons. But it seems strange to sell the same products on each separate domains. If they appear to be similar, it will look strange for the visitors. Especially when you are about to start more than three domains.
If you have one domain, you have got the time to build a reputation for that domain. If you have 50 or 100 domains, you will hesitate to put as much as interest in each
individual domain. May be, they will have interest in the beginning, but later they will have the temptation
to auto generate content. Or they just try to combine a bunch of feeds.
If you visit one domain versus another domain, it seems incredibly
cookie cutter comparing the two domains. The users will hate it and
start to complain. So one should keep these things in mind, if you are about to go from one domain to multiple domains.