Website Domains - 7 Things Your Web Marketer or Designer Might Not Tell You.
Most businesses who hire a web hosting uk or designer to put up a website are more interested in results than process. While that's understandable, blind trust is a liability in any business transaction. By not taking the time to understand what's inside the black box, you may be putting your business-and even your reputation-on the line. One of the most common "black box" issues I see is business owners entrusting their web designer or marketing consultant with the selection and purchase of a domain name for their website.
Now, don't get me
wrong. Lots of web marketers deal with this process responsibly. But a ton more
don't, including the ones who charge an arm and a leg for their
"expertise." Here are some things you need to be aware of when selecting
and purchasing a website domain:
*Select a domain
that is easy to remember and even easier to spell.
Long-winded or
otherwise hard-to-spell domains frustrate users and make for clunky marketing
messages, online and off. For the same reasons, go with a.com domain if you
can. This is what people tend to default to when typing a URL into their
browser or relaying a website address to friends and colleagues.
*If you can use a
relevant keyword or phrase in your domain, great. If not, don't sweat it.
Keywords only matter
to domain search uk selection insofar that the people who maintain
websites tend to link out to other sites using a site's URL in the "anchor
text" of the link. Search engines like this, and so do users. But there
are other ways to get juicy anchor text into your backlinks. This method just
happens to be a handy one.
*If you're
struggling to choose a domain name
because all the ones
you want are taken, or you just can't think of something simple and memorable
that fits, go to InstantDomainSearch.com. I use this tool all of the time to
brainstorm both domain names and names for entirely new websites or product
offerings.
*Purchase
variations of the domain you will use for your website, but just the obvious
ones.
For example, I own the
domain snap-va.com for this website, but I also own snapva.com (no hyphen). I'd
just rather not have another website out there with a domain that is so close
to mine. If you do purchase slight variations of your main domain, however, be
sure to point the other versions to the main URL. That way, if someone types
one of these other variations into their browser, the main website will still
be called. Your hosting service should be able to help you with this.
*Make sure your
domain is registered under YOUR name and YOUR business.
I am blown away by how many marketers, web
designers and IT consultants register client domains under their own name or
business and not the client's. There are 2 reasons this is problematic:
*A domain name is
intellectual property like anything else you use to market and operate your
business.
Yet many businesses
out there don't even know that someone else owns their website domain(s).
Moreover, they often don't find out until the third party does a disappearing
act with their precious domain(s) in tow. It's a downright irresponsible
business practice carried out by consultants and designers who either can't be
bothered to educate their clients or don't understand online business
fundamentals (but pretend they do).
*There's a very
good chance your website will outlive the relationship you have with your web
designer or consultant.
There's an even better
chance that such a person will go MIA when your domain comes up for renewal.
(I'm being facetious here, but this happens so often it's almost funny.
Almost.) Domain registrars won't hunt you down to make sure your domain gets
renewed. The domain will simply expire when the renewal date passes without
payment, and now your website will be missing in action as well. If you rely on
your website to attract leads, generate sales, and keep the marketing pipeline
humming along, having it go down for an extended period of time is bad for
business.

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