Questions

I bought an out-of-business competitor's domain, which still ranks in Google. What is the best way to use the domain?

The main option I see is re-direct the domain to my site. However, my uneducated guess is that Google will probably de-rank the domain pretty quickly if I do that. Looking for some expert opinions.

5answers

Do you have any interest in maintaining the domain? Is it getting regular traffic?

To maintain that, you'll want to get some relevant content on the domain as quickly as possible. From there, you can decide what you want to do with it.

If you just bought it for nostalgia or because it belonged to your competitor, and have no intention of doing something it with, you can do a redirect as the Google rank really won't benefit you.

Let me know,
-Shaun


Answered 8 years ago

Get it appraised then either hand on to it, start a new site to direct it to and build up the asset or just list it for sale.


Answered 8 years ago

Normally you don`t want to do 301 redirect of pages since it will gradually decrease "link juice" - a complete domain redirect to your site is an option. However if the WHOIS data is changed Google will pick up on this and reset what makes most sense to users i.e. if bounce rate is high you won`t really benefit from all this work. Did you buy the rest of the company also? If yes - a sister company for 12-18 months whilst you transition customers over to your domain is the best way to go. Look at it as a restaurant - different name/chef that wants previous regular customers to try out what the new management has to offer!


Answered 8 years ago

SEO isn't my area of expertise, really. But in other respects, domain names are. So I'll throw out a few ideas for you to think about.

It's possible the domain name itself has market value apart from the back links, customer memories, and residual traffic. In that case, you might list the domain for sale. However, it's impossible to judge without knowing what the domain is. Most likely there is no intrinsic value. Just the SEO or lead-generation benefits you might experience as a business with an adjacent service offering.

Rather than redirecting the domain, you might consider using it separately. There are a few ways to do this.

Maybe there's value in developing their old domain as a secondary website for your business. If their domain is descriptive of what you do, this might make sense. However, if their domain simply represents their defunct brand, then developing it would actually conflict with your own brand identity.

Another option is to put up an efficient single-page lander on their domain. It might explain that the old company has gone out of business and funnel interested customers toward your website, either through links or a contact form. Whether this is worthwhile or not depends on the quantity / quality of traffic their old domain is getting. How many leads would you expect to receive and what are they worth?

Before you do anything like this, however, you'd want to think about legal repercussions. Maybe there aren't any. However, it's possible the company went under, the domain expired, but the trademark remains active. That could pose a risk if you use their old domain without permission. Assuming they object and have the funds to sue. If there's a lingering trademark, you might want to have a conversation (in writing via email) with the old owners about their future intentions regarding the brand name.

Just some options. If you'd like to discuss further, I'm happy to chat.


Answered 8 years ago

It depends, if all the organic traffic is going to the home page and your domain target the same topic, you woud probably transfer the ranking. If there are lots of pages ranking on the domain you bought, you would need to offer the same content on your site and redirect url by url!


Answered 8 years ago

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