Domains for PBN

xha44a

New member
Jan 11, 2013
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Hi,

I'm having a tough time finding *niche relevant* domains for my PBN. By niche I mean very specific niche relevant domains. So couple questions...

1) Do you guys just use *generic* niche domains without worrying about the specific as-is relevance and then repurpose them?

2) Do you broaden your niche to be not so relevant? For example if my niche is high performance mustang carburetors would you guys go with anything vehicle - RV, truck, car, etc?

Just wondering how tight to focus. I have a good source of domains for relatively cheap but I don't want to spend money I shouldn't/don't have to.

XH
 


Check out DomCop. Lot's of search options there.

1) It's always better to find niche relevant domains and rebuild the old site if you can with archive.org.

2) Generic or multiple category news sites and personal blogs can be very handy.

For mustang carburetors I would go anything automotive related.
 
Using broad niches always gives you much diversity which is huge also for Google. You can pretend being authority in any of these allied niches.

:rasta:
 
If it were me, the I would use a very niche relevant or specific TLD for a PBN. However, if you are planning on using those TLD for another project a year or two down the road, then you might want to leave the name in a somewhat more vague or generalized area. Just think 'big picture' for your TLD. So for instance, if one of the blogs in your PBN is about rare skin conditions, you might go for something as specific as the actual skin disease name for your TLD or more generic such as a beauty/skin health related TLD. That idea could be applied to numerous niches, just giving you an example to work with.
 
You can get a generic PBN and make it niche relevant and almost any niche PBN can be used for what you want to promote as long as the article is relevant, if you have a PBN about sport you can still link to a tarot reading site, just say a player went to a tarot reader that predicted his team was going to win and they did, or if a real estate PBN just add a article that says that previous owner was a famous tarot reader or they used tarot to find perfect home... just some examples.
 
You can use a lot of domain names there are but... Have a look at its backlink profile first.

Meaning, domain name won't matter as much. What matters is backlinks that point at that domain. If backlinks of that domain could somehow be related to the subject of your money site than go for it (despite the domain name). Your content will convert subject of the domain just fine. If you can't think about the way backlinks could be related to your money site, than look for something else.

If there is no backlinks at all, then use any domain that could be somehow related to your money site. In real world that could be a LOT of domain names. Your mission is to convert those domains into relevant sites to your niche (by using right content based on right KW research).
 
1) Do you guys just use *generic* niche domains without worrying about the specific as-is relevance and then repurpose them?

2) Do you broaden your niche to be not so relevant? For example if my niche is high performance mustang carburetors would you guys go with anything vehicle - RV, truck, car, etc?

1) I have a few more generic networks. You can find an angle for almost any article to fit virtually any domain. Relevancy is a lot more important these days though so its better to build a niche relevant network if you can.

2) Yeah, though it depends on your money sites - if your whole business is high performance mustang carburetors and you have a bunch of feeder sites then maybe a narrower PBN is appropriate. Its usually not practical to build out a PBN on just mustangs or engine parts though. Broaden it so it still has high relevancy but is a bit more flexible...
 
You don't need your domains to be in your niche exactly, at least not all of them. In fact, too many domains that are directly in your niche looks odd. At least I think it looks odd. Instead, I look for adjacent domains.

Adjacent markets are great because it gives a broad base, and it's easy to tie in niche relevant content that would naturally link out to you. If you have a domain about leather, make a series of posts about custom leather mustang seats and how great they hug your ass at 120mph after installing *one of these carbs*. With a little creativity, there's all kinds of possibilities to make adjacent content: metalworking domains, tools domains, auto painting domains, anything automotive related really, racing domains, etc etc. Think broad, any topic that the writer would also be interested in mustang building can be niche relavent.

Also anything personal, like peoples expired personal blogs. Assuming they are worth buying it's super easy. Write a series post about their journey rebuilding their mustang carburetor or whatever, with a link to yourself of course.

The people that would naturally link to you aren't just direct competitors (other carb domains) it's the same people that would be buying from you. You are presumably trying to create an artificial link network that appears as natural as possible, so think about who would naturally be reading your content / buying from you, and linking to you, and what would they be writing about. It wouldn't be other carb sites mostly, it would be enthusiast and people who use carbs.
 
Ok, I hope it's not taboo to toot my own horn here, but I created a software system for this very purpose:

SEO Autoflow | Rank, Scale, Profit

Point and click and you can find available PBN domains in any niche of your choice pretty much on autopilot. I've been using it for my own purposes for about a year now and have found nice domains in dozens and dozens of niches as well as in a handful of different languages.
 
I created a software system for this very purpose:

SEO Autoflow Scam

Point and click and you can find available PBN domains in any niche of your choice pretty much on autopilot. I've been using it for my own purposes for about a year now and have found nice domains in dozens and dozens of niches as well as in a handful of different languages.

Cool-Starry-Bra_o_92498.jpg




:frenchman:


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Hey, it's Fallout Boy! Nice game.

Have you used SEO Autoflow?


Excellent video mate. What tool did you use to blur out the urls in the video?

I created a similar expired domaining software and want to blur out cnn.com, bbc.co.uk urls in my sales video.
 
Excellent video mate. What tool did you use to blur out the urls in the video?

I created a similar expired domaining software and want to blur out cnn.com, bbc.co.uk urls in my sales video.

Heh, at first I thought you were being nice. But now I realize it was sarcasm. :p

Anyway, the video was pretty fun to make. If you stay on for a couple more minutes you can even see footage of me fishing next to an opera house.

Those domains are real and sitting in my blog network right now, by the way. You can only find maybe 1-2 40 DA+ per month but they are out there.

I'm based out of Amsterdam and deal with a lot of Benelux clients, so it helps to not be looking for .net, .com, and the super common English domains. My software supports 150+ TLDs and we're working to add another 500+ to the list in the next month or so.

Cheers,
Kyle Duck
 
You are better off going broader with your domain rather than too narrow.It helps matching your long term goal.
 
You can only find maybe 1-2 40 DA+ per month but they are out there.

That's all I needed to hear. It looked somewhat intriguing in the 5 seconds I looked at your page. But if you can only find 10% of the 40 DA sites with your software that I find manually in a month, thanks but no thanks.

For anybody wanting to find domains, you can scrape and spit out literally hundreds of available domains with backlinks every single day, the bottleneck isn't finding the domains it's manually reviewing the backlink profiles. Which you would still have to do regardless of what software you're using. So save your money, learn how to scrape, and put your money into ahrefs or majestic subscription.
 
learned alot from this so called "newbie" question part, which to me, it doesn't sound newbie at all, appreciated.
 
That's all I needed to hear. It looked somewhat intriguing in the 5 seconds I looked at your page. But if you can only find 10% of the 40 DA sites with your software that I find manually in a month, thanks but no thanks.

For anybody wanting to find domains, you can scrape and spit out literally hundreds of available domains with backlinks every single day, the bottleneck isn't finding the domains it's manually reviewing the backlink profiles. Which you would still have to do regardless of what software you're using. So save your money, learn how to scrape, and put your money into ahrefs or majestic subscription.

Yes, if you've already built an automated scraper for yourself, then there's no for SEO Autoflow. Well, unless you're still spending a ton of time doing the sorting by hand and what not. This pretty much automates all that. The people who will the most benefit from this are guys finding domains from drop lists or auctions or using labor intensive scraping.

I actually really undersell the amount of domains you can find....we get hundreds per day as well but it really varies per niche.

I personally outsource the whole backlink checking process -- costs me about $3-5 per day as well -- and give the exact outsourcing system in the Member's area.

Also have some software for automating -- or at least speeding up -- the backlink checking process in the works, but not sure if that's something i'll be releasing publicly though...

Cheers - K