International SEO is how you tell search engines which countries and languages your content is actually meant for. That covers hreflang tag implementation, URL structure decisions (ccTLDs, subdirectories, or subdomains), multilingual content strategy, and regional search engine optimization. Get it right, and the right content reaches the right audience in the right market—no cannibalization, no duplicate content penalties.
Où les projets échouent
Conformité
Hreflang Implementation
International URL Architecture
Multilingual Keyword Research
Regional Technical Audits
Content Localization Strategy
Performance Monitoring by Market
Ce que nous construisons
Multi-Market Site Architecture
Automated Hreflang Validation
Regional Schema Markup
CDN & Edge Optimization
Search Console Multi-Property Setup
Competitor Gap Analysis by Market
Notre processus
Market & Technical Audit
Architecture & Strategy
Implementation
Content Localization
Monitoring & Iteration
Questions fréquentes
Should I use subdirectories, subdomains, or ccTLDs for international SEO?
Subdirectories (example.com/de/) are the default recommendation for most businesses. They consolidate domain authority under one root domain, they're easiest to maintain, and they work well with modern CDNs. ccTLDs make sense if you've got strong local brand presence and dedicated regional teams. Subdomains are rarely the right call—they split link equity and add crawl complexity without much upside.
How long does it take to see results from international SEO?
Expect 3–6 months for measurable organic traffic growth in new markets. Technical fixes like hreflang corrections can show indexing improvements within weeks. How quickly content localization pays off depends on market competitiveness—low-competition markets may see traction in 8–12 weeks, while established markets like Germany or Japan often take the full 6 months to gain meaningful share.
Is machine translation good enough for international SEO?
No. Machine translation misses local search intent, regional slang, and the keyword variations real users actually type. A direct translation of your English keyword often targets a phrase with zero search volume in the target language. We always run native-language keyword research first, then build localized content around validated terms. Translation is a starting point, not a strategy.
Do I need separate hosting for each country?
Not anymore. Modern edge networks like Vercel and Cloudflare serve content from data centers worldwide, giving you local-speed performance without managing regional servers. We configure edge routing so users in Tokyo hit a nearby node just as fast as users in New York. When your CDN handles geo-distribution properly, server location stops being a meaningful ranking factor.
What's the difference between multilingual and multiregional SEO?
Multilingual SEO targets different languages (English, Spanish, German). Multiregional SEO targets different countries that may share a language (US English vs. UK English, or Spain Spanish vs. Mexico Spanish). Most global expansion requires both. Hreflang tags handle the mapping—telling Google this page is for Spanish speakers in Mexico, while that page is for Spanish speakers in Spain.
How do you handle SEO for search engines beyond Google?
We optimize for Baidu (China), Yandex (Russia), Naver (South Korea), and Yahoo Japan based on your target markets. Each engine has different technical requirements—Baidu needs simplified Chinese and specific meta tags, Yandex favors .ru domains and Cyrillic content. We tailor the technical implementation and content strategy per search engine, not just per language.
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