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Does Setting Your Geographic Target In Google Webmaster Tools Work?

Google Missing The Target?Back in October of 2007, Google launched Set Geographic Target in Google Webmaster Tools. It basically allowed you to tell Google if your site is based in a certain geographic location. For example, let's say you had a UK site, using a .com domain - Google would often not give the site any preference in the Google UK search results, unless it had a co.uk TLD. The Set Geographic Target option was suppose to give Google more clues about the site and help it rank better in the local that was specified with the tool.

A Google Groups thread leaves me to believe that it might not be the case. Susan Moskwa, an official Google representative said:

Using the tool to target example.com to the UK may have some effect on non-country-restricted searches, but it probably won't be the same as having example.co.uk. Most sites will see results somewhere between the two extremes (no effect, and total equivalence with ccTLDs).

Wait, so are you saying setting your geographic target may or may not have an impact on how your rank in a localized version of Google? Let me bold Susan's response, " Most sites will see results somewhere between the two extremes (no effect, and total equivalence with ccTLDs."

Hmm and I not understanding the response? I am not sure. I have seen dozens of posts complaining that the tool doesn't improve their ranking in the localized Google version. In fact, respected SEO, David Naylor just posted a blog post with the title, Google Webmaster Tools smoke n mirrors. In that post, he expresses his dissatisfaction with the tool and describes how it simply doesn't work for him.

Does it work for you? Please do comment with your feedback, if you have any.

Forum discussion at Google Groups.



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posted rustybrick in Google Optimization at May 9, 2008 7:37 AM Comments (9)

Comments

I know of 1 very large website that has it's UK sub-directory which is hosted in the states. The directory ranks very well on Google UK including UK only pages. They have set this up purely through the webmaster tools. I think large international websites were the reason they introduced the feature, so it sort of makes sense that it has started working for these sites 1st. I am really hoping that this tool does work and that the one that I know about is not just a one off.

 

Well, it doesn´t work for me either. When looking at top search queries the different results based on SERPs are gigantic, not to mention if I select other country than USA. I totally agree with David, the only thing that I really take care of in webmaster tools is the sitemap analysis.

 

The tool does do what you said--it gives us more clues about the site. However, it's not the only factor we consider when determining which geographic region a site is most relevant to. For example, if you had a .com that was all in Russian, talking about Russian geography, and had a ton of incoming links from .ru sites, but you set its geographic target to Colombia, we might be skeptical.

As mentioned recently on our blog (http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2008/04/where-in-world-is-your-site.html), you should also see results in country-restricted searches: e.g. if a site uses our tool to target Colombia and a searcher restricts her search to "only pages from the UK," that site shouldn't appear in her results.

 

Geographic targeting through Webmaster Tools hasn't had any effect on my blog. Perhaps I'll need to get a dotCA and hosting on Canadian IPs to get geographic targeting to work.

"[...] if a site uses our tool to target Colombia and a searcher restricts her search to "only pages from the UK," that site shouldn't appear in her results."

Doesn't that mean that geographic targeting alone through Webmaster Tools will only remove my site from other local SERPs (i.e., from the U.S./U.K./etc)? If so, I don't really see a practical use for setting geographic targeting (without the TLD/IP counterparts), other than saving on bandwidth...

 

I asked the original question on Google Groups. You need to go back and read the question - it relates to 'web searches' not 'pages from X' searches.

And I can say that the tool very much works. Global site, US servers, .com, 15 languages, all ranking nicely in 'pages from' searches.

 

We run a fairly big site that is set-up to target 3 geo locations.

domain.eu (set to Germany)
domain.eu/ru/ (set to Russia)
domain.eu/en/ (set none)

I used to have the German version on domain.eu/de/ and set the geo-target pretty early when the webmaster tools released. At some point I got great rankings on the geo Google (de), but I didn’t track how long it took. We have reworked the site for some reasons and introduced the domain structure as above. We have great results on Google.com but no-results on Geo-Google. I think that is typical as for geo-targeting reasons. I have set Germany as our geo-target on the 25th of April, until today no effect, but I have read it takes about 6 – 11 weeks for this preference to work out. For us, this tool is very valuable (especially if it does what it is supposed to do).

I am going to bookmark this thread and drop by later to share my experience.

All the best to all of you,

Ivo

 

i do have the same experience with my site.
the site is .com and we use sub-domains for countries so that de.nysite is the German version of the site.
it's more than 2 months since we updated the geo graphical info in google webmaster tool but nothing! gurnisht! in all other countries it tooks us 2 weeks and it work great

 

8 weeks have passed and nothing. The fact that this tools takes such a long time is understandable on one hand (since people would mess around with the index on a daily basis if this tool worked immediately).and on the other hand I am losing my whole business because of it. We invested a fortune (time and money) to build our website and to produce good content and now we cannot target our markets for TLD reasons. It took me month to understand that Google is not ranking our site because of this. Now I need to wait for this tool to work out :(

We rank 1 on yahoo for competitive search terms and 0! on Google Germany. But apparently 99% of the Germans use Google and worse (for us) Google.DE.

Facts to the site:
Server: Germany
Language: German
80 % Inbound Links from .DE sites
PR 5

Overall I love Google and all their services but this tool (situation) is driving me mental.

 

Been waiting ages for Google to recognize the site as being for a UK market. I don't understand why they have this tool if it isn't actioned.

 

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