For as long as most marketers can remember, getting a good domain name was a prerequisite to anything you were going to do on the web. Without a good domain name, no one would be able to find your site, or recall your campaign to get them to visit your page. Domain names were worth paying thousands of dollars for, or even potentially changing the name of your business to something that you could actually get the domain name for.
To a degree, this is still true. As a marketer, I certainly still preach the importance of a good domain name and counsel my clients to make sure they can get one. Still, it is not the necessity that it once was. In fact, there are plenty of times now when you can succeed without having the best domain name. There are several factors pointing this decreasing importance that you should consider before launching a mega-search for the ideal domain name:
- Link Shorteners – Thanks mostly to Twitter, but also social media sites as well, link shorteners like Bit.ly or TinyURL.com are making actual URLs almost irrelevant because they mask actual URLs and convert them into short versions that are much better when sharing a link in a place with a 140 character limit.
- Social Media Homepages – More and more frequently we are starting to see brand direct people to their social networking profile on a site like Facebook as a destination rather than a brand homepage. When people visit a social networking site directly, their first impression doesn't involve your website (or its URL), and this is increasingly common.
- Creative spelling – You could fill a book with how many new popular sites there are which feature what might kindly be called "creative spelling" of common words or even made up words. Flickr, Dopplr, and Bing are just a few examples. Either way, there is a much broader creative license to choose a unique name that works than there ever was in the past.
- Growing consumer sophistication – Another element helping to lessen the importance of getting domain names with certain extensions (such as always getting a .com name) is that consumers are growing increasingly familiar with other versions of domain names. If your primary site is on a .org, .gov, .edu or .net extension – it is much more likely today that consumers will remember and use this instead of just focusing on .com and assuming it is part of your name.
- Power of search – Continual improvements in search algorithms and usage of search engines means that even if consumers remember just a part of your name, they are far more likely to type that into Google along with your location or anything else they remember to find your site. Certainly having a good domain name can help with search, but there are other ways to make sure your site is search optimized and it doesn't all hinge on your domain name.
- Rise of online marketing – As more and more marketing dollars shift online, this also reduces the relative level of importance of your domain name. Having a great easy to remember domain is important if you are putting it on a billboard that people drive by at 65 miles per hour. It is less important if you are using a higher percentage of your promotional budget to drive people to click a link online which will directly take them to a page (usually without ever showing them the URL they are going to until they reach it.
- QR Codes & Visual URLs – The symbol of the growing popularity of "visual URLs" are QR codes. These are two dimensional bar codes that can be scanned in (usually by a mobile phone or other such device) and it allows you to visit a specific site without ever entering a URL. In the near future, we will likely see other ideas like this to help people navigate their way to online destinations without ever having to share an actual URL on a keyboard.
Rohit, are you also suggesting that there is less value in having your keywords as part of your domain name, per your point 5 above
Great post, some interesting thoughts. As a search marketer there is ofcourse things i would especially consider before buying a new domain, but broadly speaking I think you’re right.
Still there is a large SEO benefit from a keyword domain since a lot of the anchor text you will get will include the keywords again.
I’m in agreement with Rob here. Even if your domain name carries less weight, you’ll see the benefit from generalised anchor text.
Thanks for the great comments, everyone. I definitely agree about the search marketing point when it comes to domain names – they are still heavily weighted in most search algorithms and will continue to matter for how you rank. The other point I thought someone might mention in defense of domain names is that there are still a population of less sophisticated web users who may have more recently come online and still rely heavily on traditional domain names with .com suffixes in order to navigate directly to sites. Domain names aren’t dead … but I do think they are definitely far less important than they once were.
While you have valid points. I agree with Rob. I think it’s still important for SEO that you have a good domain name. Also, having a good domain name has better recall for people even if they are not on the internet atm. Like say… http://www.microsoft.com But it’s true it’s becoming limited to well-known brands. I’ve seen small businesses simply putting up myspace sites and not bothering with their own website.
I saw this posted on https://www.OceanfrontDomains.COm and I think the author is very far off base. Wayyyy off!
A good .COM domain is where it’s at. Period. It’s the difference between being on Main Street and in the warehouse district.
The few bucks you save by buying a .Garbage will quickly be forgotten when you have to compensate with huge advertising and name recognition problems.
Again, I totally disagree.
Thanks for the the tips, that was really my problem. Some of my clients are confuse with the domain name i am using. Maybe because it is more on numbers and it is too long.thanks you so much.
My first reaction on reading the post was keyword optimization too – interestingly mirrored in most of the comments. I like your point about social media home pages – good observation. Nice article, found it very useful. Thanks!
Nothing you say successfully argues against the value of a .com domain with the right keywords in it.