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208

answers:

2

Hey guys,

I'm developing a site at the moment which requires localization to a number of different countries. We own our site's name on many of the countries' TLDs (though not all of them). From a developer's perspective, many things are simplified if we could simply redirect all traffic to "domainname.co.uk" to "uk.domainnname.com" (or "domainname.fr" to "fr.domainname.com") — but my boss is concerned that there may be an adverse SEO impact from doing this.

So, I'm wondering if anyone knows if there is indeed any SEO impact from doing this. The country-specific content is still there, just served from a country-specific subdomain rather than the TLD.

Sorry if this is all a bit confusing! If anyone can offer any help, that would be fantastic.

Many thanks.

+2  A: 

A country-specific search engine like google.co.uk will understand that domainname.co.uk is a UK site, but it won't understand that about uk.domainnname.com.

If I select google.co.uk's pages from the UK option I'd expect to see the former but not the latter.

RichieHindle
You can set the geographic target of the site using Google Webmaster tools
Eduardo Molteni
+2  A: 
Eduardo Molteni