Have you ever created a great domain name but find that you can't get what you want? Then you searched for many other names only to hit defeat. What rules will you break to manipulate a name for the domain you want? Are there really certain rules when creating a domain name that matter when it comes to SEO, website ranking, word length, or key words that matter while avoiding other keyword combinations?
How do you battle the domain beast when choosing a new domain?
The other question many have is what are the rules on TLD's (top level domains) or other domain extensions? I've always used TLD's and secured my brand with .com and .net. Often to protect a brand name I'll use various spellings in case some clever deviant decided to copy my domain name in another spelling. The downside to that, is now you have a lot of domains to keep up with.
Are there other TLD's to consider?
It depends on what you are naming. You can't think of it as "domain naming" if it is a company name. It's company naming. If you are naming a product, then it's product naming.
You have to think about your audience. If you are naming a blog just for your own hobby, you can do any creative name. If you are doing a professional blog for something specific, and want to earn, then you need to come up with a professional name that also generates trust.
If you are naming a business, the goal is to earn in most cases. Due to that, you need a good name that generates trust. That then helps to find the domain name for your business website. Normally, that would be the business name with a .com as that's the preferred thing due to recognition. You don't want to do tv ads, etc, and then have people assume you have the .com but you have the .somethingelse because then your ad money just went to get someone else traffic.
If you are naming a product, the same rules apply. Make it a good name that fosters trust. Don't make kitchy names that you find cute. It's not about you. It's about the customer. Who do you want to attract? What need is the product serving? What space are you in? You probably would have competition in that space so always, always, always have the customer in mind. Step out of your own head on that one and just think about that client. Once you have the product name, the domain name usually follows suit. If it's an online product, then the rules are a bit more complex as your product and domain name need to be easy to type, easy to remember, and not be too long.
Do an experiment - type your preferred domain name 50 times fast. Is it easy? Does that domain name make sense to you if you look at it objectively? Are you by accident using a word that promotes something you don't want to promote?
PengieTech said:
It depends on what you are naming. You can't think of it as "domain naming" if it is a company name. It's company naming. If you are naming a product, then it's product naming.
You have to think about your audience. If you are naming a blog just for your own hobby, you can do any creative name. If you are doing a professional blog for something specific, and want to earn, then you need to come up with a professional name that also generates trust.
If you are naming a business, the goal is to earn in most cases. Due to that, you need a good name that generates trust. That then helps to find the domain name for your business website. Normally, that would be the business name with a .com as that's the preferred thing due to recognition. You don't want to do tv ads, etc, and then have people assume you have the .com but you have the .somethingelse because then your ad money just went to get someone else traffic.
If you are naming a product, the same rules apply. Make it a good name that fosters trust. Don't make kitchy names that you find cute. It's not about you. It's about the customer. Who do you want to attract? What need is the product serving? What space are you in? You probably would have competition in that space so always, always, always have the customer in mind. Step out of your own head on that one and just think about that client. Once you have the product name, the domain name usually follows suit. If it's an online product, then the rules are a bit more complex as your product and domain name need to be easy to type, easy to remember, and not be too long.
Do an experiment - type your preferred domain name 50 times fast. Is it easy? Does that domain name make sense to you if you look at it objectively? Are you by accident using a word that promotes something you don't want to promote?
Re domain naming. Pengie Tech suggested professional domain names when hoping to earn money. I totally agree, a professional sounding name instills confidence but I do wonder how Facebook ever became popular, I'm not sure how the name relates to the services it initially provided.
Geffers
Web Diva said: Have you ever created a great domain name but find that you can't get what you want? Then you searched for many other names only to hit defeat. What rules will you break to manipulate a name for the domain you want? Are there really certain rules when creating a domain name that matter when it comes to SEO, website ranking, word length, or key words that matter while avoiding other keyword combinations? How do you battle the domain beast when choosing a new domain?
Personally I have a couple of domains I only keep for a year at a time, usually offered very cheap but price rockets on subsequent years so I let them expire. Only use them for ease of access to external sites I create for experimental services on the cloud.
I'm not really in to web site creation or design, not terribly artistic, I have a small web server running on home network merely for sharing files with a US friend (I'm in UK).
Guess it all depends what needed for. Geffers
Geffers G said:
Re domain naming. Pengie Tech suggested professional domain names when hoping to earn money. I totally agree, a professional sounding name instills confidence but I do wonder how Facebook ever became popular, I'm not sure how the name relates to the services it initially provided.
Geffers
Yeah, Facebook is like putting together two words that aren't related to each other to me. Money, I suppose, investment and advertising helped it take off?
Geffers G said:
Web Diva said: Have you ever created a great domain name but find that you can't get what you want? Then you searched for many other names only to hit defeat. What rules will you break to manipulate a name for the domain you want? Are there really certain rules when creating a domain name that matter when it comes to SEO, website ranking, word length, or key words that matter while avoiding other keyword combinations? How do you battle the domain beast when choosing a new domain?
Personally I have a couple of domains I only keep for a year at a time, usually offered very cheap but price rockets on subsequent years so I let them expire. Only use them for ease of access to external sites I create for experimental services on the cloud.
I'm not really in to web site creation or design, not terribly artistic, I have a small web server running on home network merely for sharing files with a US friend (I'm in UK).
Guess it all depends what needed for. Geffers
I do the same with domains, though, for me, buying domains is like buying an idea, keeping it for a year and then realizing, nope, I don't think that domain name can be used for something, and I don't keep it.