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What the Heck Should We Call *.domain.com?

Rand Fishkin

The author's views are entirely their own (excluding the unlikely event of hypnosis) and may not always reflect the views of Moz.

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Rand Fishkin

What the Heck Should We Call *.domain.com?

The author's views are entirely their own (excluding the unlikely event of hypnosis) and may not always reflect the views of Moz.

If you've been playing around with Linkscape a little, you've probably seen our attempts at creating a lot of new naming conventions for metrics and features that were previously the exclusive realm of web indexing researchers, information retrieval scientists and search engineers. Things like mozRank & mozTrust (mT) have seemed to work out fairly well so far, but our testers and members have struggled a bit more with mozRank (mR) vs. Domain mozRank (DmR) - one is for a page while the other applies to a domain - and been seriously confused about FQDs vs. PLDs. Let's address this issue.

As search engines scour the web, they identify four kinds of web structures on which to place metrics:

  • Individual pages / URLs - these are the most basic elements of the web; file names, much like those we've had on computers for decades, that indicate a unique document. Search engines assign query-independent scores, most famously Google's PageRank, to URLs and judge them in their ranking algorithms. A typical URL might look something like https://moz.rankious.com/_moz/page.html
  • Subfolders - the folder structures that websites use can also inherit or be assigned metrics by search engines (though there's very little information to suggest that they are used one way or another). Luckily, they're an easy structure to understand. In the URL https://moz.rankious.com/_moz/blog/post, "/blog/" is the subfolder.
  • Subdomains / Fully-Qualified Domains (FQDs) / 3rd Level Domains - In the URL https://moz.rankious.com/_moz/page.html, there are three kinds of domain levels present. The top-level domain (also called the domain extension) is ".org," the 2nd level domain is "seomoz" and the third level domain is "www." These are sometimes referred to as "subdomains," although that nomenclature can also be intended to mean 3rd level domains that are not "www." Again, these structures can receive individual assignments of importance, trustworthiness and value from the engines, independent of their 2nd level domains, particularly on hosted publishing platforms like Wordpress, Blogspot, Wetpaint, etc.
  • Complete Domains / Host Domain / Pay Level Domains (PLDs) / 2nd Level Domains - The domain name you need to register and pay for, and the one you point DNS settings towards, is the 2nd level domain (though some improperly call it the "top level" domain). In the URL https://moz.rankious.com/_moz/page.html, "seomoz.org" is the 2nd level domain.

You can see how we've tackled this in our Linkscape Help Center Concepts area:

However, to date, it's still one of the biggest puzzlers I see when folks are faced with the data, and while I love that we can be so robust and detailed, it's no fun dealing with information overload. There are all sorts of important metrics that can be applied to 2nd or 3rd level domains, but if even the savviest of SEOs struggle to understand/interpret/apply this information it's time for a change.

For example, according to a Linkscape report for SEOmoz:

  • https://moz.rankious.com/_moz - the page/URL has 41,741 links from 3,281 FQDs
  • www.seomoz.org - the Fully Qualified Domain (FQD) has 11,734 other FQDs linking to it
  • *.seomoz.org - the Pay-Level Domain (PLD) has 10,039 other PLDs linking to it

Being able to quickly and easily understand these differences is important for comparisons, reporting and SEO implementation, but it's a challenge to explain, so I figured I'd put it to our community - what is the best way to describe 2nd vs. 3rd level domains? What should we be calling them and how can we explain it in an easily digestible but granular fashion?

Please use your thumbs to reward answers you like (I know I will, especially since it's nearly Christmas Eve!).

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