Get a real blog: Deciding on a domain name

This is the second in a series of get a real blog posts, designed to help you make the jump to self-hosted blogging (if that’s what you want to do).

Note: I’ll let you know right up front that I have an interest in getyerown.com - I’m using it to illustrate some of the examples below. Most domain registration resellers operate in more or less the same way - please use whichever one you feel most comfortable with. Just compare prices first :)

I’d also like to add that the following is a longer post than most I write - the subject material is complex and I’m only covering it at a fairly superficial level. If you have questions, please leave a comment and I’ll do my best to answer them.

Domain names are important if you want to increase awareness of your blog. Whether you’re promoting a cause or selling a book or making money directly from the blog, the right domain name will help you achieve your goals. There are two approaches to this - a “shirley” name (in other words, calling it anything that might as well be Shirley Temple) and stacking your domain name with the same keyword or words that people will use to find you on Google. Of these, the latter is the better - all things being equal, Google will give a higher relevance to a domain name that matches the entered search terms. In plain language, “acmewidget.com” will rank higher than “acmebolts.com” on a search for Acme Widgets (notwithstanding that the Acme Bolt Company might have a higher page rank for their site - but this is one of those “all things being equal” discussions, where you are wanting to stack as many positives on your side as possible - please get the right domain name, it will help you, even if you never want to sell your blog).

Keywords that fit your niche
Firstly, it is important that your domain name fits your niche as closely as possible - and wherever possible, it should be loaded with niche-specific keywords.

Example: Let’s say you’re living in Canberra and run a television repair business - what keywords do you think that your customers are going to type into google or whitepages.com.au (or any other business directory service) to find you? How can you make it easier for them? You can probably guess that canberratelevision.com or canberratelevisionrepair.com are the obvious choices - but how do you know?

Enter Overture’s Inventory tool. It is easy - you enter the search terms you’re interested in, and it returns the most popular associated searches across Overture’s database. Searching on “Canberra Television Repair” didn’t bring up any hits - I guess because Canberra is in Australia - but “Television Repair” showed the following results.

overturetelevisionrepair.gif

You can see that “television repair” ranked second in associated searches - so it is actually a good combination to go for.

Once you’ve found the right combination of keywords, what do you do next? Find the right domain name :)

Finding the right domain name
This is not as easy as it sounds. Truth be told, if there are two good keywords that go together to describe your niche, someone has probably grabbed them.

Some rules of thumb:

  • if you’re never ever going to sell the domain name/blog, then monetary value of the domain name alone doesn’t matter as much. That said, domain names are more valuable if they are going to bring in more search engine traffic (and you might be wanting to do that, so you may as well go for the best name you can).
  • all things being equal, .com names are worth more than .net, which are worth about the same or slightly less than .org, but all these are worth more than an equivalent .info domain name. This is very much an “all things being equal” thing - trust me, facibus.com is not worth anywhere near as much as problogger.net :)
  • all things being equal, shorter names are more valuable than longer ones. They’re also easier to remember. Imagine telling someone your domain name over the phone - it is pretty hard to misunderstand “news.com.au” or “acmebolts.com”
  • complex words, words with different ways of being spelt, and uncommon words can make your life harder - netmarketing.com vs netmarketting.com, enroling vs enrolling, and so on. These are the province of the typosquatter (someone who makes money from common mispelling of popular sites or where people get the .com and the .net mixed up - generally frowned upon).

There are a couple of ways to find the right combination of keywords such that it works for Google and for human readers:

  1. magnetic words, and
  2. a domain name suggestion service.

Magnetic words are easy - just write all the keywords you can think of on little bits of paper and move them around (just like you would the magnetic poetry kit words on your refrigerator at home). When you come up with something that doesn’t sound too revolting, check a domain name reseller to see if it is available.

A simple domain name suggestion service is available through getyerown -  I typed in acmebolts.com (which is already taken) but it suggested the following alternatives under the Smart Search tab:

acmebolts.gif

You can also have a lot of fun with NameBoy. NameBoy does the same smart search but does it, well, a little smarter. Here’s how NameBoy handles the keywords “acme” (used as primary) and “bolts” (secondary):

nameboy.gif

What I usually do is to use NameBoy then buy the domain names from getyerown - it works out a little cheaper. NameBoy wants USD15.00 a year for .com domain names and getyerown USD7.15 (USD6.95 plus 20 cents for the ICANN fee). Please register domain names with whoever you feel comfortable dealing with - for example, if you are an Aussie, Melbourne IT charges AUD69.50 a year for .com domain names, but their offices are right here in Australia (if that is important to you then the extra is worth thinking about).

There is another alternative - to buy the right name even though it belongs to someone else. Naturally, this costs more. If you would like to know more about how to do this, please let me know, and I’ll add a post to the series that covers it - I’ve done it, and it can be fun - but be careful that you don’t get sucked into the hobby of domaining - it can be a trap! :)

Next: we’ll look at finding the right blog platform.


Related Posts


If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed or add it to
Del.icio.us | Digg | Technorati | reddit




4 Responses to “Get a real blog: Deciding on a domain name”


  1. 1 cerebralmum (11 comments.)

    This is great. when I bought my domain name recently, I didn’t think of SEO, I thought of it more in terms of “branding”. In the end, because it’s a small personal blog it doesn’t really matter. Keeping it simple - my domain, my blog name, the name I post under all the same - is as much (possibly more?)than I needed I think.

    But I have another blog currently under planning and with the resources above, I just found the perfect .com domain for it. Now I just have to cross my fingers that it stays available until I have the pennies.

    (Incidently, Net Logistics based in NSW is selling .com domains for AU$24.95/year.)

  2. 2 AndrewBoyd (226 comments.)

    Hi cerebralmum,

    it is a really good thing to grab the domain name that matches your nom-de-net - this is a valuable piece of advice that I’ll include in the next version of this information.

    Good luck with the new blog project - and thanks for the Net Logistics link. I know that some people feel better about going through a local registrar/reseller.

    Best regards, Andrew

  3. 3 Joe (1 comments.)

    Also, don’t foget that google will often rank you gigher for the keyword phrase in your domain because it regards searches on that exact phrase as a “navigational query”.

    Therefore canberratelevisionrepair will almost always rank number one for the search “canberra television repair” even if it doesn’t have many links compared to its competitors.

    Another great little site for finding names is mydomainfriend.com

  4. 4 AndrewBoyd (226 comments.)

    Hi Joe,

    thanks for your comment, and thanks for the information - I hadn’t heard them referred to as navigational queries before, only knew that all things being equal they generally did better.

    Now I know why :)

    Thanks once again, Andrew

Leave a Reply