To me it depends on the situation. Obviously if you have standalone
blog, this will create great linking back and forth to your main
website, thus having opportunity to rank well in the SERP's two-fold.
I have been reading lately however that Google in particular, "Could"
be starting to algorithmically determine if there is a strong
connection between these two sites, and lower results on one domain,
but I wouldn't worry about that now until there is proof.
I personally suggest a subfolder for certain businesses, because all
the fresh content, and backlink juice gets distributed to the main
domain. So if you want to juice up the main domain, go with a
subfolder domain such as
www.seomoz.com/blog
In the end, it really doesn't matter a whole lot in my opinion...
Take a look at this post I did months ago on this topic, it includes a
video i took from some of the best bloggers in the country. (Caution!
Not the best videographer!)
http://www.redvwbus.com/2008/03/07/should-i-have-a-stand-alone-blog-sub-domain-sub-folder/
On Jul 28, 10:49 am, jak <
jasonke...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I am not certain which is better, but why not do both? Keep them
> separate (domain wise) with links to one another and include an rss
> feed on the main website from the blog. I could be wrong, but I
> believe that if you feed the rss using the right php, that the rss
> content on the main site will be picked up by search engines.
>
> On Jul 27, 10:14 pm, Karen <
klma...@charter.net> wrote:
>
> > Hi All,
>
> > I have a client who wants a blog and a site. Is it best to keep the
> > site and the blog separate (different domain names) or together (same
> > domain name i.e.,
www.mysite.com/blog) in terms of SEO and anything
> > else? I have heard arguments on both sides of the coin. Fiona
> > suggested I repost this question to the group as she is thinking about
> > redoing her whole blog. Her opinion...
>
> > ...(though I MAY learn differently a month from now) A blog is not a
> > website and a website is not a blog. Yes, I know, MANY "websites"
> > these days are in fact all blog-software-driven. But I see the
> > purposes of them as different. The website is for selling a product/
> > service. The blog is for attracting a loyal following and
> > interactivity and viral/social media marketing. In my opinion it is
> > hard to do both on one domain.
>
> > Let's takewww.cuteoverload.comasan example. It's a blog-built site,