Dynadot

information “People still like .com’s,” says Google’s John Mueller

NameSilo
Watch

News

Hand-picked NewsTop Member
Impact
3,492
Mueller is known in SEO circles as the “new Matt Cutts”. Matt Cutts used to be the head of Google’s Webspam team and would make videos answering questions from people about Google’s thoughts and practices regarding ranking websites. The videos were highly useful and would be something that many marketers and professional search engine optimizers would write about, comment on, and debate.
Mueller also leaves comments on Reddit once once in awhile. Extremely useful insight since it is coming directly from someone at Google with real authority. Compared to your cousin who thinks he knows about SEO. Of course… I recommend you take what Google says with a bit of a grain of salt. They’ve lead me astray more than once with “advice.”
So John Mueller, the current Google SEO community outreach authority, admits people still like .com domains and likely will continue to use them. What do you think about Google saying “People still like .com’s?”..
Read More
 
1
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
When I type divorce org into Google - I see "Did you mean: divorce.org" warning...
No warning here, just the results.
And I can understand that Google thinks I might have meant divorce.org when I type divorce org, but why no warning?
And the other strange thing is, when I type: org divorce, what misspelling would Google make out of that?
Still, all results on the first page are .org websites....
And when I type: net divorce, I get a page where the first 3 results are .com and all the others are .net.......
Still a misspelling?
And to make things funnier, when I type: net divroce, Google does give me a notification. They give me the results for net divorce and give me the option to look for net divroce.
So, what they do, if I am correct and follow your rules, Google here corrects my misspelling of divorce, they notify me of it, and they also correct my misspelling of net, but they dont notify me of it, and I get a page where the first 3 results are .com and the rest is .net......
I am lost for words.....
 
Last edited:
0
•••
It shows me this warning above results...
 
0
•••
0
•••
No problems, I already answered you which algorithm is used to process such queries...
It is absolutely unrelated to standard ranking.
 
0
•••
How do you explain that the results for 'divorce net' are different from 'net divorce'? Does Google correct a different misspelling in that second case? And if yes, what missspelling is net divorce?
And why do they suggest me to give the results for 'net divorce' in stead of 'net divroce' if net divorce is also a misspelling?
I really want to believe you, but up to now I have seen very little proof that logically explains the results Google gives me.
 
0
•••
people understad .com is synonyms of internet thats why people like .com
 
1
•••
I think they want to say extensions will not be used for ranking therefore don't register them for better SERP rankings. There are many very high CPC keywords in the form of domain extensions around like creditcard, accountant, lawyer. They want to say if you register best creditcard or best lawyer, the creditcard and lawyer parts will not be counted in the algorithm.
 
2
•••
It really depends on certain country...
For example, in Poland and Russia .com is not even 2nd choice TLD among endusers...
 
0
•••
Everybody is mostly familiar with .com at the end. Even in schools, most TLDs aren't discussed but .coms.
 
0
•••
.coms are popular but not everywhere
 
1
•••
There are more .coms than other extension, most people will firstly assume that any domain is a .com.
Personally I don't care about the extension when I click a search result I know Google will (most of the time) pick the highest quality result and put it in the fist line regardless of the extension.
.com isn't always better than other extensions compare between XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX.com and XXX.net in this case the net is the winner.
 
1
•••
No warning here, just the results.
And I can understand that Google thinks I might have meant divorce.org when I type divorce org, but why no warning?
And the other strange thing is, when I type: org divorce, what misspelling would Google make out of that?
Still, all results on the first page are .org websites....
And when I type: net divorce, I get a page where the first 3 results are .com and all the others are .net.......
Still a misspelling?
And to make things funnier, when I type: net divroce, Google does give me a notification. They give me the results for net divorce and give me the option to look for net divroce.
So, what they do, if I am correct and follow your rules, Google here corrects my misspelling of divorce, they notify me of it, and they also correct my misspelling of net, but they dont notify me of it, and I get a page where the first 3 results are .com and the rest is .net......
I am lost for words.....

Google is an ai it learns from the patterns of searches and the clicks done by it's users Google will try to assume what are you looking for based on what it learns from previous users.
 
1
•••
I typed two words: divorce org
Just check all the results on page one.
Then I typed: divorce net
Just check all the results on page one.
The words org and net arent words that really occur on the homepages of the sites that pop up one page one of the search results.

Home page text isn't the only place where search engines find context. Net and Org can be found in title tags and/or anchor text of those pages. Anchor text is something most people don't think of. If your domain is example.org, you're going to get links with the anchor text "example.org". If your domain is "fruit.fly" and you get links that say "fruit.fly" and "visit fruit.fly" you're likely to pick up some rankings for "fruit fly", even if the site is about fruit, not insects.

As for .com - in situations where people can see the URL in the search results, testing shows they're more likely to click on something familiar (i.e. "safe.") User interaction in relation to seo is a controversial topic, but let's say your page ranks #3 for a query and searchers click much more frequently on results #4 and #5, why would Google leave your page at #3? Whether rankings change or not, getting fewer clicks would dampen the benefit to being #3.

BTW, just to clarify one other thing - while he is one of their more visible spokespersons, John Mu isn't head of the webspam team. He's a webmaster trends analyst and runs online webmaster Q&A sessions. Big difference.
 
Last edited:
2
•••
0
•••
I know what he said, but can you give me a logical explanation why all results on page one have a tld that exactly matches my second search keyword?
Google thinks your query is navigational, and show's you the best match for your domain query. It's an edge-case, and for any query that doesn't look like you entered a domain they'll ignore the TLD for most part.
 
1
•••
I earn xx to xxx daily in my dot coms parking.

No secret it's king for a reason and most widely known and typed in.
 
0
•••
https://adamyamada.com/people-still-like-coms-says-google/

Mueller is known in SEO circles as the “new Matt Cutts”. Matt Cutts used to be the head of Google’s Webspam team and would make videos answering questions from people about Google’s thoughts and practices regarding ranking websites. The videos were highly useful and would be something that many marketers and professional search engine optimizers would write about, comment on, and debate.
Mueller also leaves comments on Reddit once once in awhile. Extremely useful insight since it is coming directly from someone at Google with real authority. Compared to your cousin who thinks he knows about SEO. Of course… I recommend you take what Google says with a bit of a grain of salt. They’ve lead me astray more than once with “advice.”
So John Mueller, the current Google SEO community outreach authority, admits people still like .com domains and likely will continue to use them. What do you think about Google saying “People still like .com’s?”../QUOTE]
 
0
•••
Yep - we're all a bunch of commies. :)
 
0
•••
Let me get this right. I type the word net. Google assumes that I was not searching for the word net, and therefore shows me only websites that have the tld .net ??

Yes, they completely ignore it for ranking in SERP.
Mistyped queries - it is another theme.

easy to test... Try now net divorce and org divorce since that would definitely not be mistype.
 
0
•••
People are more likely to click on a search result from a .com website because they trust them more and see them as having more authority. That's very important for SEO.

CA-Domain.png


I disagree with that....

In Canada I am far more likely to click on a .ca because it means I am dealing with a Canadian company. The US is at a distinct disadvantage over other countries because the .US ccTLD has not taken off yet. Clicking on a .com means you could be dealing with anyone and the potential client now has to figure out if they are dealing with a US company or a company from another country.

I think ccTLD's are the best out there and I sell a lot of .ca's to Canadian clients.

Same goes for .uk or .de.... I bet the click through rate is greater in those countries too as opposed to .com's.

No arguing that .com is king but seriously when I shop or look things up I go to google.ca and look for addresses ending in .ca. It is the quickest way to find local results.
 
Last edited:
1
•••
It's interesting that nobody ever suggests .eu as a ccTLD. :)
 
0
•••
It's interesting that nobody ever suggests .eu as a ccTLD. :)

I think that one may just go the way of the dodo bird as the eu breaks into pieces. The concept was really good but uniting that many countries and keeping them together is going to be tough.
 
0
•••
I think they want to say extensions will not be used for ranking therefore don't register them for better SERP rankings. There are many very high CPC keywords in the form of domain extensions around like creditcard, accountant, lawyer. They want to say if you register best creditcard or best lawyer, the creditcard and lawyer parts will not be counted in the algorithm.
I know what they said. And my question was why one of my search keyword did show up in the tlds of most hits of the first page. The response was that this is because my search word was considered a mistype.
easy to test... Try now net divorce and org divorce since that would definitely not be mistype.
lol, if Google considers "org divorce" a mistype for divorce.org, then they are not as intelligent as I thought.
 
0
•••
org divorce returned bunch of sites ending in .org

So it is a lie on Google's behalf to claim that extension doesn't matter. They clearly considered the right of the dot as a source of information and placed lots of weight on it for those sites to come up first in the search.
 
0
•••
It's interesting that nobody ever suggests .eu as a ccTLD. :)

.eu was never going to work due to there being so many different languages spoken within Europe.
 
0
•••
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back