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I'm starting a new project that has been long overdue.
It's a site that aims to become the dominant authority site in a particular niche in a specific country.
Eg think finance in France for example.
I want to use a country-specific domain name, that's a cctld, because that's where I can get very good brand names now. As getting a brand name of that same quality in .com will cost an arm, a leg and possibly a testicle, lol. So I'll rather be putting that much money towards content and links rather than towards just a domain name.
Problem is, once I grow, gain traction and dominate the niche in this country, I will need to expand to other countries to increase the valuation of the site. These countries will be on the same continent (Africa), and all speak the same language (English).
Is there a way I can get Google to show my country-specific domain name to other countries (to rank in other countries)?
Or to geotarget a continent from a cctld, instead of just a country?
Or even globally to the world....so that it can also rank if someone in US searches for its keywords?
My research by searching the threads on this forum on cctlds and their links to Google official documentation suggests this is not possible currently.
My solution is, when its time to expand to these other countries, I'll establish individual sites in each of those countries with their own cctlds eg example.jp, example.fr, example.hk, etc.
Problem with that is that they will be new sites that will still take time to establish their own authority, even if they have some links from the original country's site. And will also require some good resources to develop and take it to the level of the original site.
Is there a better way to go about this?
I've also considered subdomains (eg au.example.fr), and subfolders (eg example.fr/au), but those ones will require a .com to work well.
As the site will not likely rank in other countries as long as it's built on a cctld.
Besides it would look really weird to put other countries as subdomains and subfolders on a cctld instead of on a .com. (see the last examples above to see how weird it looks, don't think it can even work out at all).
If push comes to shove, I can get a .com if absolutely necessary.
But I think my strategy of cctlds is better.
What do you guys think?
What will you do if you are in my shoes?
Is there any consideration I'm missing?
Thanks.
It's a site that aims to become the dominant authority site in a particular niche in a specific country.
Eg think finance in France for example.
I want to use a country-specific domain name, that's a cctld, because that's where I can get very good brand names now. As getting a brand name of that same quality in .com will cost an arm, a leg and possibly a testicle, lol. So I'll rather be putting that much money towards content and links rather than towards just a domain name.
Problem is, once I grow, gain traction and dominate the niche in this country, I will need to expand to other countries to increase the valuation of the site. These countries will be on the same continent (Africa), and all speak the same language (English).
Is there a way I can get Google to show my country-specific domain name to other countries (to rank in other countries)?
Or to geotarget a continent from a cctld, instead of just a country?
Or even globally to the world....so that it can also rank if someone in US searches for its keywords?
My research by searching the threads on this forum on cctlds and their links to Google official documentation suggests this is not possible currently.
My solution is, when its time to expand to these other countries, I'll establish individual sites in each of those countries with their own cctlds eg example.jp, example.fr, example.hk, etc.
Problem with that is that they will be new sites that will still take time to establish their own authority, even if they have some links from the original country's site. And will also require some good resources to develop and take it to the level of the original site.
Is there a better way to go about this?
I've also considered subdomains (eg au.example.fr), and subfolders (eg example.fr/au), but those ones will require a .com to work well.
As the site will not likely rank in other countries as long as it's built on a cctld.
Besides it would look really weird to put other countries as subdomains and subfolders on a cctld instead of on a .com. (see the last examples above to see how weird it looks, don't think it can even work out at all).
If push comes to shove, I can get a .com if absolutely necessary.
But I think my strategy of cctlds is better.
What do you guys think?
What will you do if you are in my shoes?
Is there any consideration I'm missing?
Thanks.