.com Not Listed in Regional Yahoo? Don't Despair!
by © Glenn Murray
If you're a non-American business with
a .com web address, and your regional Yahoo ranking is important to you,
then my story might interest you.
Recently my copywriting website dropped
out of Yahoo's Australian rankings. For quite a while, it had been at number
1 for my primary keywords "advertising copywriter", "copywriter", and "website
copywriter". But then it suddenly disappeared. I clicked through about
10 pages of results, and it was nowhere to be seen. I then searched for
my domain, and Yahoo couldn't find it.
Something smelt fishy.
I'd done nothing `naughty' to my site to
warrant a ban, and I still had heaps of links to my site (actually, I had
more than ever before).
I'm an Australian advertising copywriter.
I'm based just north of Sydney and I host my website with a major Australian
host. But my web address is a .com, not a .au. I started thinking this
might be the problem.
So I emailed Yahoo support, explaining
the problem, and sharing my thoughts on the cause.
And all of a sudden, nothing happened.
So I waited. And I waited. And I waited.
And finally, after about a couple of weeks, I received an email from a
Yahoo support representative informing me – incorrectly – that my keyword
wasn't featured in my page title or description. I should remedy this shortcoming
and re-submit my site to Yahoo.
Frustrated, I replied. I repeated the important
facts from the first email just to ensure they'd listened. They hadn't.
They hadn't even searched for my domain to confirm that Yahoo no longer
recognised it.
When they got back to me this time, they
had started paying a bit more attention. The support rep confirmed my suspicion
that Yahoo had excluded my site because of its .com URL. Her very helpful
solution was that I should change my domain to .au! She included some ridiculously
complex instructions for how to do so, and sent me on my merry way.
As you might expect, I wasn't satisfied.
Nor was I merry. I explained to her that this was not an acceptable solution
because all the links to my site on the internet are pointing to the .com
and my email address uses the .com.
She was unmoved. She asserted that this
was the best and only way to solve the problem. Oh… and it might help if
I added my primary keyword to my title and description.
My laughter was not good humoured! I wrote
back expressing my displeasure at this "solution". I painstakingly explained
how Yahoo had made a mistake, and that if Google was capable of recognising
my Australian business despite its .com addresses, I would think it's technically
possible. I also cited several other .coms in the first couple of pages
of Australian results.
No response.
The situation didn't look promising…
If this sounds like a familiar story to
you, don't despair. A week or two later, I searched Yahoo Australia for
my primary keyword, and surprise, surprise… My site was ranked number 1
again!
The moral to the story? Don't be intimidated
by Yahoo. Trust your instincts and don't give up. If you're an Australian
business with a .com, and you're not listed in Australian searches, this
might be why. In fact, I would think this story is relevant to all regional
Yahoos. (Of course, before making any accusations, it's a good idea to
make sure your site is properly optimised and that you have plenty of inbound
links.)
Anyway, that's my story. I hope it helps
someone.
And they all lived happily ever after.
So far at least…
Yahoooooooo!
The End.
About the Author:
-----------------------
Copyright © Glenn Murray
* Glenn Murray heads advertising copywriting
studio Divine Write. He can be contacted on Sydney
+612 4334 6222 or at glenn@divinewrite.com
Visit http://www.divinewrite.com
for further details or more FREE articles.
"I have heard
with admiring submission the experience of the lady
who declared
that the sense of being well-dressed
gives a feeling
of inward tranquillity which religion is powerless to bestow."
--Ralph
Waldo Emerson (1803-82) --American writer, philosopher, poet, essayist
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