{"id":557,"date":"2007-11-13T11:39:00","date_gmt":"2007-11-13T15:39:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/webmaster.www.websitesinaflash.com\/?p=93"},"modified":"2022-12-21T23:53:08","modified_gmt":"2022-12-22T07:53:08","slug":"seo-where-to-host-your-blog","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.websitesinaflash.com\/2007\/11\/seo-where-to-host-your-blog\/","title":{"rendered":"SEO – Where to Host Your Blog?"},"content":{"rendered":"
NOTE: This post is over 2 years old and is no longer totally correct.<\/em><\/p>\n I know that a blog can really help to increase your website content. A blog shows the Search Engines that there is actually someone behind this website, and they actually care about their website.<\/p>\n When I started this blog at the beginning of this year, I was trying to research whether it was better to have two medium-content heavy sites that link to each other, or one site with all of the content.<\/p>\n The Setup<\/strong><\/p>\n My main Website Design Website<\/a> is Websites in a Flash. This site has 20-30 pages of content, and got approximately 400 unique visitors a month. (This is primarily from Search Engines.)<\/p>\n I knew that this blog would have many pages of website-terms, so I decided to host it on my Ashton Sanders<\/a> website as a subdomain. The purpose of this was to see if two medium sized sites linking to each other would create an increase in unique visitors for both my Main Website and my Blog.<\/p>\n Results<\/strong><\/p>\n Obviously, my Blog had an increase in visitors (because it didn’t have any before). Surprisingly, it has totally surpassed my normal website, although I guess it shouldn’t be surprising.<\/p>\n