Reserve Your Domain name Now!
Making The Dot Compromise:
Consider Dot Net
Copyright (c) 2002 Heather Reimer
Have you felt the frustration yet? Are you one of the 50,000 new
netrepreneurs trying weekly to get your site online only to get
caught up in the dot com feeding frenzy?
It starts like this: You dream up a list of possible names for your
company. You run them through a domain search engine only to find
all your dot com selections are already taken.
So you face a choice. Do you settle for a domain name that doesn't
really turn your crank but is available with the prized .com extension?
Or do you say 'damn the torpedoes' and go with a .net, .org or other
suffix and hope your clientele will remember it and appreciate what
a rebel you are?
For starters, regardless of the suffix, the best way for traffic
to find you is if your domain name reflects the nature of your business
and is catchy enough to recall without a lot of mental gymnastics.
(There are notable big-budget exceptions to this rule).
You want a domain name that is spelled just as it is pronounced
so even if your potential clients hear it mentioned in conversation,
they can type it in later without confusion. If you can squeeze
in one or two delectable search engine keywords, so much the better.
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If you do wind up using .net, .org or one of the 250 country- specific
extensions, you need to hammer it home in your promotions. Repeat
it often. Accentuate the difference.
Jenean Matthews of http://www.vitaherbs.net
does all that plus supplements her online marketing with free gifts
like pens printed with her URL. Does she ever worry that she missed
the .com bandwagon?
Not a bit. She predicts that, with the advent of new technologies,
typed-in URLs will eventually become a thing of the past anyway.
"I feel the way we surf the net will change. For example, the CueCat
device eliminates the need for typing URLs," says Matthews. (Cuecat.com
offers free software that sends your browser automatically to the
site you need.)
Shelley Lowery also bucked the trend. Three years ago, she had to
choose between sacrificing her favorite name, which was already
taken, or making the dot compromise.
Lowery took the bull by the horns and registered her business as
http://www.web-source.net
. Today, it's a highly- respected guide to professional web design
and development with a dedicated following. Lowery says going .net
didn't hurt a bit.
"A few years ago it seemed everyone was convinced that if you didn't
get a .com domain you were a second class citizen. Things have changed
considerably with the addition of the new domain name suffixes and
the extended number of characters.
"In my opinion, you have just as much of a chance of your visitors
finding you with a .net or .ws suffix as you would if you settled
for an alphabet soup domain name like www.learnhowtomarketontheinternet.com"
On the other hand, the website DotCom.com says we shouldn't be afraid
of using a longer name. Shorter isn't necessarily better in the
scramble for a domain name.
"Just as company names continually break boundaries in the effort
to be both unique and memorable, so too must domain names extend
beyond the currently prevailing convention of simple words with
as few characters as possible."
But that may end up being a moot point. New technologies and new
suffixes (like .info, .pro and .biz, among others) will blow apart
the dot com obsession.
Internet users will adapt to the ever-changing online environment,
as they always have. And we'll all be laughing that we were ever
so distraught over the dot com dilemma.
In the meantime, be a rebel. Stay open to the options and try to
enjoy what should be one of the most fun parts of starting a new
business - choosing a domain name!
Suspect your content is not working as hard as it should? Heather
Reimer writes action-inspiring newsletters, web content, sales letters,
ads and articles. Get a FREE content analysis report on your site
when you request an estimate. mailto:heatherreimer@codetel.net.do
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