Don Cameron wrote: > Very few people nowadays go through the mental process of "OK, now if I type > quantas.com.au (or is that qantas.com.au?), I might find what I am after"... > what they do is click "Home" (because 9 out of 10 people set a Search Engine > as their homepage), and type "Qantas Australia". They know they will get a > selection of matches offering far more choice than by typing single > repetitive entries into the URL box. ... > Am I miles off the mark? - interested in your thoughts. and by doing so injected a large dose of sanity on an otherwise poor day. Thankyou. Unless you are prepared to stump up a huge chunk of conventional marketing dollars to get your domain name continuously in front of eyeballs/ears in a catchy way, a 'good' domainname is worth a lot less than it might once have been, and if you're going to spend that sort of cash, ANYTHING can become a well-remembered name. As someone pointed out a few weeks ago, who would have figured 'yahoo' as a 'good' name (whatever your personal definition of 'good' might be). Time was, before money sullied the picture, domain names were sought after for coolness by length - shorter was better - hence sun.com, hp.com, 3com.com, abc.com etc. The reason - the Web didn't exist (HTTP wasn't invented), and neither did search engines, so domain names HAD to be easy to remember, and short to type. These days, a short, easy to type domain name is much less important, because of the existance of GUIs and search engines and categorised directories - and because of it, almost any domain name will do, provided your web-pages are listed on the most popular search engines/directories and include good keywords. For a concrete example, take Nortel - they used to use domain name 'nt.com', but have changed to 'nortelnetworks.com'. Has this hurt them in any way? Nope - to find Nortel, and save worrying if its www.nt.com, www.nortelnetworks.com, www.nortel.com, or any of the .net or other permutations, I expect most people click once to Google (insert your favourite), type 'nortel' and click twice - its actually less 'keystrokes' to do this than type out the whole URL longhand. Thats why I wasn't too concerned with registering 'ecommunications.com.au', nor am I particularly bothered by 'ecom.com.au' being taken by someone else. Do people get us confused? Of course they do - but thats because the company names really are similar, not anything particularly inherent in the domain names. Hell, I can search Google for 'VODSL in Australia' and still come up with links to ourselves - and theres no way I could achieve that through simple registering of domain name variants! -- ----------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Brooks |Ph: +61 2 9274 7776 CTO, eCOM Communications |Fx: +61 2 9274 7771 mailto:paul.brooks§ecommunications.com.au |Mob: 0414 366 605 http://www.ecommunications.com.au |Received on Tue Feb 20 2001 - 22:40:50 UTC
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