Oh dear... once again you've entirely missed the point.
No... I haven't.
It's not about how competitive a search is, it's about whether the extension is taken into account when returning results.
Um... yeah, sure - whatever you say, as long as it'll get you to stop rambling on about "google.com.au", "frogs tv" and "dogs info".
You stated: A great .com, with equal development, will likely outrank that random .ext every time.
Yes, yes I did...
I stated: In fact I'd go as far to say that a .com will rank worse than certain extensions but never better
... and yes, yes you did.
To prove my theory, all I had to do is show an example of where that is the case. I showed you three examples which you are not disputing (only ridiculing the examples).
Now you can either
- dispute my theory (with logic and reason)
- prove your theory (which you haven't even attempted to do)
Ugh... do we really have to keep repeating ourselves?
Your only "examples" have been completely irrelevant, I HAVE disputed them, AND given reasons as to why... yet you still fire back with the same exact "reasoning"...
The reason I chose search terms that were not so competitive was so that we could more quickly see the results.
Yes, lets cut corners to speed up the results - who cares if those results mean absolutely nothing, right?
If I chose a term like "poker tv" for example, to analyse the results, I might have to examine many pages in.
Let me explain:
A search for "frogs tv" (phrase match) yields 987 results. So analysing 1% of the results means you only need to look at the first page. A search for "poker tv" yields 431,000 so to anaylse 1% you'd need to examine 413 pages.
Therefore, to make it easier to demonstrate, I picked a bizarre search term. This is a common method of testing in SEO.
If you really think you can extract ANY relevant SEO information from a search phrase that NOBODY in the SEO world is competing for (because nobody in the world is searching for it), I have a hard time believing you know what you're talking about.
And you probably didn't run with "poker tv", because, well...
Google
... the entire first page of results is completely dominated by .com - one of which (#4) is pokertv.com, imagine that!
Thanks for providing an example of a half assed "kw.com" development that's somehow managing to outrank almost all of the 400,000+ sites returned for the query.
Anyway I think this is all a little over your head so don't worry about it.
Yes, you're probably right. After all - you're the expert, I'm just some kid who read SEO for dummies this weekend and thought it'd be fun to come to NP's to pick a neverending SEO, erm, "discussion".
C'mon now.
BTW is there a contradiction in your statements?
"A great .com, with equal development, will likely outrank that random .ext every time."
and
"I'll agree that .au might have a leg up on other extensions in google.com.au"
If you see a contradiction there, it's only because ranking on google.com.au means something to you - and I completely understand why it would.
But for me personally, SEO is about ranking on the most competitive engine in the world, end of story.
Which is why the first statement, really has nothing to do with the second, imo.