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Ask the Experts: Should I Move My Blog? ask the experts

Ask the Experts: Should I Move My Blog?

  • July 16, 2007
  • by Gradiva Couzin

Q: We have a blog at a free blog site which is well linked to and fairly well trafficked. I’m wondering how best to leverage the popularity of the blog to increase traffic to our company’s site. I’d consider incorporating the blog into the main site, but that risks breaking all of the existing links to it. Are there any other options?

A: Your situation is not uncommon – we often hear about folks who for various reasons have two websites and then want to merge them without any loss of page strength. Here’s our take on some approaches to this situation:

  • Option (1) Move your blog to a new URL location on your company’s main website. Like any website move, this would be best if done with a 301 server-side redirect from each old URL to the corresponding new URL, so that links and search engine robots would follow through to the new address. Unfortunately, setting up a 301 redirect probably isn’t possible with your free blog host.
  • Option (2) Move your blog to a new URL location on your company’s main website, but without a 301 redirect. This would unfortunately mean a loss of the built-up page strength that you have created for your blog. You would need to manually request updates to all links pointing to your old site, and cross your fingers. The up-side of this approach is that at least your future blog work will be integrated with the primary site. If it is a fantastic blog with loyal readers, you may be surprised that new links and references will build up quickly. (Note that in this option, you keep all old posts at the old location in archived form – no comments allowed – and then continue with new posts on the new location).
  • Option (3) Keep the blog at its current URL location, but re-skin it so that it includes the global navigation for your company website (similarly add the ‘blog’ link to the primary website so that the navigation is seamless between the two). If this is possible on your blog provider, then this would probably be your easiest option.
  • Option (4) Keep the blog at its current URL location and brand it with your company, link to the primary site, and periodically include posts that in some way feature your company.

Regardless of how you leverage it, a popular, respected blog is a fantastic asset to your company. Congratulations!

A Real SEO Case Study – Test Your SEO Smarts and Play Along. articles and interviews

A Real SEO Case Study – Test Your SEO…

  • July 11, 2007
  • by Gradiva Couzin

Why would a perfectly respectable website find itself with a spam-blasted Google listing? Follow along and test your own SEO expertise as we walk you through this actual SEO case study. The solution may surprise you!

In our book, Search Engine Optimization: An Hour a Day, we recommend a method called “I Wonder Why That’s Happening.”  What is this method?  Nothing more than following your curiosity in a systematic way to discover answers to questions about how your website appears in search engines.  In this case study, we walk you through the “I Wonder Why” steps and ultimately solve our Google mystery.

The Setup

Your friend mentions to you that she’s disappointed with her website’s performance in the search engines.  The site isn’t ranking well and she doesn’t know why.  It’s a comment you hear a lot, but you’re surprised to hear it from her.  Her restaurant, Providence, is one of thehottest places to dine in Los Angeles.

Screenshot of Providence LA website

Of course, your friend is a restaurant owner, not a web marketer, but still…with great press and a huge clientele, shouldn’t the website be doing well without much of an effort from the restaurant management? You decide to investigate, using your SEO skills.

What’s your first step? (Click on your answer to move to the next step.)

  1. Take a look at the site.
  2. Check the site’s rank on the search engines.
  3. Check the Google PageRank of the site
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Who We Are
Gravity Search marketing is led by SEO industry veteran and author Jennifer Grappone in Los Angeles. The company was founded in 2006 following the success of the book Search Engine Optimization: An Hour a Day (Wiley, 2006, 2008, 2011), which Jennifer co-authored. Gravity’s clients include Fortune 500 companies, global entertainment brands, niche B2Bs, large and small retailers, and nonprofits.
Our small, talented California-based team specializes in SEO, advertising, analytics, and online brand visibility. Senior Technology Manager Andrew Berg, who joined Gravity in 2009, elevates the company’s technical SEO expertise to an elite level.
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