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Selecting a Quality Domain Name
Copyright 2005 Shelley Lowery When you're ready to launch your web site and you're trying to select a good domain name, there are many factors that need to be taken into consideration. Select a Domain Name that Reflects Your Web Site Above all...

How To Make Money Selling Domain Names
Domain name speculation has to be one of the very best ways to make money on the Internet. It's easy, fun, takes a very low investment and has a huge profit potential. Businesses and webmasters are always looking for high quality, marketable ...

What's Good For A Domain Name?
I have purchased a lot of domain names for many different reasons. Sometimes the domain name is for a business purchase, such as an ecommerce site. I have purchased many domain names for simple personal reasons, and occasionally the purchase was ...

Domain Name Scams: Have You Fallen for One?
Have you received information regarding your domain name through postal mail? Did you receive numerous invoices regarding your domain name? Ever been stuck in a contract for well over a year? If any of the above apply to you, you may have fallen for...

Your Domain Name is Your E-dentity. Choose it Well.
Three Easy Steps to Starting Your First Web Site, Part Two: "Your Domain Name Is Your E-dentity. Choose It Well" If you don't have your own domain name, your chaces of on-line success are slim to none. Your domain name is your identity, your...

 
"What's The Big Fuss About Long Domain Names?"

The word is out. You can now register domain names of up to
67 characters. This is going to shoot your ranking way up on
the search engines. Because if you stuff all your keywords
into your domain name, search engines are simply going to
love your site. Or so they say...

But is that really the truth?

No point speculating. Let's do a little test...

Go to your favorite search engine, say AltaVista. Key in
your search term, say "website promotion." Look at the top
10 rankings, closely.

How many of these top rankings actually have the full term
"website promotion" in their domains?

No hype, just facts.

Call me a natural sceptic if you want. When the news hit the
town, with all the "Special Announcements" flying
everywhere, urging people to "go grab a new all-you-can-
stuff keyword rich domain name and emerge tops in search
engine ranking," I was not at all moved. I believe this is
too simplistic an approach to getting high search engine
placements:

1. Besides keywords in domain names, search engines look at
a few other factors for relevancy. In fact, this is what Don
Dodge, AltaVista's Director of Engineering said: "Keywords
in the domain name do not help much in ranking. We look at
half a dozen factors in ranking. The words on the page,
their frequency and position on the page, are still among
the most important factors."

2. Search engines are constantly evolving. Once they find
out that such keyword-stuffed domain names are content-poor
sites with low relevance, they are going to come up with new
rules to preclude such sites from getting the top spots.

Don't get me wrong. I'm not against registering for long
domain names. I just feel that we should see things in
perspective. If you're getting a long domain name in the
hope of securing a high search engine placement, err...
based on the facts, please don't expect miracles.

So what should we look for when choosing a domain name? I
use a simple "3 Es" guide:

1. Easy To Remember
Yahoo is certainly easier to remember than AltaVista. No
surprise why Yahoo is doing a LOT better.

2. Easy To Spell
If you have a long domain name, be careful. One spelling
mistake by a potential visitor is all you need to lose him
forever.

3. Easy To Pronounce
If your domain name is hard to pronounce, how do you expect
people to spread the word and tell others about it?

What do the 3 Es have in common? They make things simple for
your visitors! Our world is complex enough. We don't need
another complex domain.

Must your domain name be relevant to your site content? Not
necessarily. What has the name "Yahoo" got to do with a
search engine or a directory? And is there any real
connection between the words "Amazon" and "books"?

Selecting a domain name is an extremely important step. So
do it carefully.

About the Author
Alan Yap, founding editor of ProfitJump.com.
Alan offers free tips and strategies for effective Internet
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