Authors: David Lindahl,Jonathan Rozek
Tags: #Business & Economics, #Entrepreneurship
Building Block One: You Need to Own a Good Domain Name
Before you can have a web site you real y need a good web address, also known as a
domain name. Right off the bat we have a myth to bust.
Myth Alert: “All Good Domain Names Are Taken”
I don’t care how competitive a market you’re in, that’s just nonsense. It’s either spoken by
people who want to keep the competition down or people who have no imagination or
creativity.
I agree that al the obvious stuff is taken like business. com or cars.com. No big deal.
The problem with real y broad names is they tend to attract a far too general group of
customers. If I knew nothing of what’s at the site cars. com and typed in that term, what
might I expect to find there? A Ford dealership? A car-buying web site? A used-car lot?
Maybe a car-part online-warehouse? A consumer-safety site with recal notices and
crash test results? The list is endless and it’s the same problem with other real y general
domain names.
Profit Principle
People who are on the Internet to browse around and see what’s out there tend to type in
general, one-word and two-word terms. People who are motivated to buy a product or
look for a solution tend to type in highly specific terms.
Using our car example, if someone types in cars.com, that person either already
knows what’s on that site or is just browsing around. However, if someone types in 2010
Honda Odyssey
EX-L in
Ocean Mist Metal ic, do you suppose that person is just
aimlessly browsing? I don’t think so. You have someone who’s already done a lot of
research and most likely is shopping for price or availability. That has implications for the
sort of descriptive domain name you might want to have.
The book you’re currently reading is not about maximizing the amount of traffic you get
to your web site. If that’s al you want, why didn’t you say so? That’s easy! Just advertise
Free Beer and you’l get al the traffic you could ever want. Instead, this book is about
getting highly targeted traffic to your site so we can get your product or service sold and
make you a pile of money.
Because so many of your very best prospective customers are the ones typing in
detailed search terms, that’s why not al the good domain names are taken. It just takes a
system for smoking out the good names and that’s precisely what I’l now lay out for you.
First, let’s discuss a series of rules that I recommend you fol ow when picking a domain
name.
Rule Number One: Stick with “.com” Names
To explain why I say that, let’s think about what happens when you’re driving on the
freeway and see a bil board. You’re doing 60 miles per hour and have a few seconds to
notice the cute babe on the bil board and you see the phone number: 1-888-Hot-Club.
“
Okay
, I’m gonna cal that number as soon as I get
home
,” you think to yourself.
Because you know that you don’t always remember stuff correctly you even repeat to
yourself a couple of times “
Hot
Club . . . Hot
Club
. . . .”
You get home and after taking off your coat you sit down and are pleased that you
remembered the number, so you dial 1-800-Hot-Club.
It’s a hot club al right, but not the one you saw on the bil board. No, it’s a competitor’s
hot club. You SAW an 888 number and REMEMBERED an 800 number because you’re
so accustomed to associating 800 numbers with tol -free numbers.
It’s no different with domain names. That bil board could just as wel have advertised
hotclub.net and you would most likely have gone home and typed in hotclub .com. Do you
real y want to go to al the effort to advertise with a non “.com” ending only to have a
portion of your audience remember someone else’s domain name? That’s free
advertising for them and bad news for you.
Rule Number Two: No Funky Spellings
The same “.com” phenomenon applies to crazy spel ings in domain names. If an
unimaginative person wants the name “homesforsaleboston.com” and discovers it’s
been taken, he’l grab “homes4saleboston.com” or even worse “homez
4saleboston.com.” He thinks, “So what? I can spel it for people and, besides, I’ve seen
lots of domain names with a ‘
4
’
instead
of
a
‘for’.”
He is destined for web failure, and so are almost al the other people with a “4” instead
of a “for” or a “u” instead of a “you.” Their customers are not going to remember that
nonsense and wil type the standard version instead.
Some people may tel you that funky, complicated names don’t matter because most
people don’t type names into their computers but they merely click on them.
Certainly, it’s true that many domain names get clicked on and not typed in, but why
handicap yourself? If your site is popular and one person is tel ing her friends al about
you, why risk having your name garbled at the very time you’re trying to spread it far and
wide?
Rule Number Three: Try to Anticipate Alternative Spellings and Either
Buy Those Names or Avoid Those Words
I was watching the network news recently and this particular show had seven mil ion
viewers on an average night. The host garbled a domain name of the guest because the
guest mumbled it and the host did not hear that the name included a “the” at the
beginning of it so he gave out the incorrect address. That was a superb opportunity for
traffic—ruined.
Therefore, if you’ve found a great restaurant domain name like “thebeststeaks.com”
you had better check to see if “beststeaks.com” is available and vice versa. If you only
own one of those versions the chances are excel ent that the owner of the other name
wil get some of your traffic. Perhaps you’l get some of his, but that may not be a good
tradeoff.
It’s the same with terms where the plural and singular forms are common or terms that
are frequently misspel ed. If you can get the name “Tal estSunflowerSeed.com” then also
grab
“Tal estSunflowerSeeds.com.”
Get
both
“DelectablePies.com”
and
“DelectiblePies.com.” Then you can easily have the misspel ed version redirected
automatical y behind the scenes to the correctly spel ed one.
Rule Number Four: Try to Avoid Hyphens in the Name
This is not as firm a rule as the first two, because Google and other search engines
interpret a hyphen as being the same as a space. Therefore, if you’re trying to grab
hollywood-homes
.com because someone else has hol ywoodhomes.com, then you
may not have harmed yourself too much. On the other hand, the nonhyphenated name
could possibly be what people mainly remember. The other problem with hyphens is
you’l forever have to explain to people: “Okay, it’s hol ywood dash homes.com not
hol ywoodhomes.com . . . remember there’s a dash in there, you know a hyphen? . . . like
that little minus sign?” It gets old real y fast to explain a name al day long.
Rule Number Five: Think about Customer Benefits, Not about
Yourself
Maybe you spent a great many years in school and are proud of the letters after your
name, but resist the urge to screw up your domain name due to your pride.
As you’l read later in the section on writing your sales material, most people are tuned
to the radio station
WII-fm
. That stands for What’s In It For Me. They do not care that you
have multiple letters after your name—al they know is that their tooth hurts and they
would like it to stop hurting. Therefore, if you have a “DDS” degree, an “FAGD,” and
even an “FICOI” designation, do not clutter your domain name with
www.johnsmithddsfagdficoi.com. They wil not understand what that stuff is after your
name, but chances are excel ent they’l type it in wrong.
Dr. Smith would be much better served by naming his site:
SmithSmiles.com
or
SmilesBySmith.com
. That’s a benefit his patients wil remember and be able to type.
In addition to domain names with benefits like Organic
TomatoSecrets.com
or
FastPerfectPies.com
, another good term to include is a geographic name. So if
OrganicTomato
Secrets.com is taken and your info product is focused on how to grow in
the cold New England environment, then look for
NewEnglandTomatoSecrets.com
.
Try This Domain Name Technique
If you’re searching for a great name and have had no luck—especial y when you fol ow
my rules above—here’s something that works wel .
It al starts with thinking about domain names as a pattern in three parts—a beginning,
a middle, and an end. Each part has a certain function.
Before we look at an example, I want to mention that it’s almost always okay to
capitalize letters in a domain name because the Internet removes the capitalizations and
displays the names in al lowercase letters. The benefit of writing them with capitalized
letters to start each word is they’re more easily read by people. Occasional y, computers
wil be picky about capitalizations, so just check if your capitalized domain name works
on your site before publishing it on business cards or elsewhere.
Now look at the example of
OrganicTomatoSecrets.com
and let’s dissect its parts:
Part One is a prefix of Organic. Part Two is the middle section describing the main
topic of Tomato. Part Three is a suffix of Secrets. Let’s start a little table with that
information:
Prefix Main Topic Suffix
Organic
Tomato
Secrets
I left the “.com” part out because we know to use only “.com” endings, so that’s a
given.
Now let’s assume that OrganicTomatoSecrets.com is taken and we need to find a
great term for our info product. Here’s what you do: Start thinking of other prefixes that
could possibly work.
SuperOrganic
Healthy
Healthful
Wholesome
NonChemical
Powerful
Think of alternatives and use a thesaurus if necessary. I like the online tool at
www.visualthesaurus.com but a book or other online service is fine too. Now load those
terms into the first column and move onto the second column.
Because the second column is for your main topic there wil be less room for creativity.
Stil , depending on your actual info product you might come up with:
TomatoPlant
CherryTomato
BeefsteakTomato
Load those terms into the table and move onto column three. What might be similar to
the suffix Secrets? How about:
Tips
Techniques
Methods
System
Solutions
KnowHow
When you’re done loading into the table al the words for al of the columns your table
should look like this:
Prefix
Main Topic
Suffix
Organic
Tomato
Secrets
SuperOrganic
Tomato
P
lant
Tips
Healthy
CherryTomato Techniques
Healthful
BeefsteakTomato Methods
Wholesome
System
NonChemical
Solutions
Powerful
KnowHow
Now is when things real y take off, thanks to a little mathematical concept cal ed the
permutation. That refers to the process of creating every possible combination from the
terms above. In other words, any possible prefix can go with any possible main topic and
any suffix. Things stil must stay in their proper column sequence—you cannot move a
suffix to the front or a prefix to the end—but otherwise you’re looking for al combinations.
Don’t sweat the tedious work because a few mouse clicks wil do al the work for you.
Go to www.sixfiguresecondincome.com and type the term “permutation” into the search
box. I’m not listing the name here because these permutation tools frequently change.
Now you should see a tool that al ows you to stick your first-column candidates into its
first column and then you can do the same for the other two columns. It should end up
looking like Figure 4.1.