Tips for choosing an SEO Friendly Domain Name

We talked previously about using extra creative domain names and being inventive with country codes. This is a great way to create short, memorable domain names that will help your customers to recognised  your brand. However, if your focus for your website is going to be heavily based on search engine marketing and where you sit in the Google results, you’ll want to make sure that the domain name you use is helping with your rankings, not hindering them.

1. Make Your Domain Name Relevant to your Business

A used car salesman with his new  business named after himself might call his company Smith & Partners. However, poor old Google, who becomes more intelligent by the minute, is not clever enough to recognise a new site called Smith & Sons will be selling cars until it starts looking at the content of the site in more detail. So, Mr Smith would benefit from choosing a domain name that helps Google work out what he does. “Smithsusedcars”(.com) or “Smithsmotorstore” or “Smithautomotives” or similar patterns will help Google to know that Mr Smith’s site is related to cars.

2. Don’t Give Up on Your First Choice

If your first choice of domain name isn’t available in .com or .co.uk, don’t give up on this domain name. You may well be able to find a variation of the name you wanted. You can add hyphens (-) like “smith-used-cars” although you should check you are not infringing upon any registered trademarks. You may also want to be careful if the company that already owns your first choice of domain is locally to you, as this may confuse the locals about which company is which. Or you might want to consider shortening or lengthening the domain name: “SSonsMotors” or Smithusedcarestores” although condsider whether a long domain name will look good on your stationery and business cards if you try this option.

3. Try to be Original

Although it’s possible to choose domain names similar to those that already exist by restructuring them a little, nothing beats being original with your domain name. It will help you to dominate the search results for the keywords in your domain name. Try brainstorming lots of different words and phrases that could sensibly be related to the business you are in and your industry. You’ll be surprised how many ways there are to cook an egg…(or decribe your business)

4. Be Greedy

When you’ve found your perfect available domain name, make sure you register your domain name in the various options that are for sale to ensure no one else can buy them. If you get a .com, it makes sense to buy the .co.uk and the .net and the .biz and so on. You’ll protect your brand name this way too and pointing all of these domains to your site will help you to drive more traffic and dominate the search results.

Using RSS to Tame the Information Overload

RSS you say? Whaaat? Well actually RSS is quite possibly one of the most underestimated tools on the web but also one of the most useful.

RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication and that’s really it explained literally in a nutshell. Its had several other names including ‘RDF Site Summary’ and laterly, ‘Rich Site Summary’ but WhatIsRSS website have an easy to understand summary:

RSS solves a problem for people who regularly use the web. It allows you to easily stay informed by retrieving the latest content from the sites you are interested in. You save time by not needing to visit each site individually.

So what does that actually mean, in laymans terms? Well, if you’re anything like me you visit a LOT of websites on a daily basis for news, football results, technology updates, shopping, travel bargains, classified ads, anything you can think of. Its time consuming isn’t it?

You don’t want to be having to remember all those URL’s off by heart so you add them as bookmarks, but then you still have to find the bookmark in your browser, click on the link and then scroll thru the latest posts on the website. Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz!

No longer do users have to go find content; now it can come to them automatically.  What if you could bookmark all your favourite websites, have something pull in all the new content as it happens and have it arranged all neatly on one page?

That’s RSS for you. See ninety-nine percent of any websites you visit and you’ll see that familiar little orange square. Like the BBC News website for example,

The ubiquitous RSS logo  What do I need to do to read an RSS Feed? 

Feed Reader or News Aggregator software allows you to grab the RSS feeds from various sites and display them for you to read and use. Probably the most universal of all RSS readers at the moment is  Google Reader which is my web-based reader of choice which is complimented by the FeedDemon desktop reader which syncs with Google for offline reading.

Here in the office we can, fire up literally in seconds  either reader and catch up with all our niche news feeds on cloud storage, the web hosting industry, web development, social media and cloud technology services, etc without any heavy lifting!

There’s an excellent and easy to follow screencast from Andy Wibbles (click on the image below) that really nails it if you’re a complete Google RSS reader newbie.

How-to-Use-Google-Reader

More than anything it is a massive time saver and the other thing that an RSS reader enables you to do is to skim the headlines on a website, so you only have to click on the news that is of interest. You can save anything of lesser importance til later.

Creating feed folders allows you to organize by topic, geography or any way that you prefer.  For example, when I’m in a hurry I usually go straight to my “Web Hosting” news folder, leaving others unread for a later time. If you’re not using folders and have all the news sources stacked up one after another on the left sidebar, you are wasting a lot of time!

Naturally the RedGalaxy blog feed should be one of the first you add to your reader!

Being Extra Creative With Domain Names

If you’ve ever tried to register a .com domain name you’ll soon realise that all of the ones you want have long since been snatched up. Luckily, in recent years there has been a upsurge in the creative use of lesser known top level domain names (TLD’s!)

We now have many known brands like Last.fm (the.fm hails from the Pacific Island of Micronesia) and formally Yahoo owned bookmarking site Delicio.us opting for alternatives to the more ubiquitous .com

There’s an official list of all the worldwide domain name extensions at administrative body IANA. Look through the extensive list of names and you’ll encounter amongst many others,

.IT, ideal for you if you run an IT company perhaps and a unique bit of branding that will make you stand out.Owned by Italy, obviously.

If music is your thing there’s .AM and .FM (for radio stations), .DJ (from East African nation of Djbouti, ideal for, yep you guessed it, DJs) and even .CD (from the Democratic Republic of Congo) if you run a second hand music store and the more widespread .TV, for obvious reasons.

Top Level Domain Names

Image via Testking.com "the history of domain names"

Here’s a useful domain name/brand tip for those of you looking for something besides the generic .com and something with a little more originality in the branding.

Scroll through the IANA list  and make a note of extensions you might like .LY for instance, which is becoming quite popular with new start ups (a good example is visual.ly a new start up for infographic tools).

Now if I wanted to come up with a snappy name that ended with .ly I’d go over to morewords.com here http://www.morewords.com/ends-with/ly/ and as you can see, you get a list of words ending in LY. You can do the same for any other two letters simply by changing the last two letters of the URL in the browser and you’ll get a bunch of words that may well trigger an idea for your business name. Then you can hunt down that unique domain name that nobody else even dreamed of!

For a quicker way of coming up with domain brand names head over to Domai.nr and have some fun with their suggestion tool.

If you need any help deciphering all of this information and want help with how to register some of the more ‘exotic’ domain names do get in touch with us here at RedGalaxy and we’ll be happy to help.