> What if a person owns a boat shop. He wants to offer Information > on his area and boating activates so he choses the name > boating.com.au. bestboats.com.au, or primeboats.com.au, or boatz.com.au or boatingexperts.com.au or boatingcentre.com.au or boatsonthenet.com.au would work just as well. > As his business expands along he has the opportunity to grow his web > presence along with his business. He can use sub domains like > nsw.boating.com.au qld.boating.com.au sail.boating.com.au > cruise.boating.com.au. Er, having subdomains works just as well with non-generic names. > Saving the registration off the extra domain names > (qldboating.com.au ect.). If the generic name gives you the opportunity to > save money down the track and offers the business owner a meaningful and > easy to remember domain name it has to be off some value. > > This theory could work for a lot off generics, I think. And for non-generics, too. Evidence, folks, we need evidence - some evidence, any evidence - to support this belief that generic names are somehow more memorable brands than non-generic names. Regards, Mark Mark Hughes Effective Business Applications Pty Ltd effectivebusiness§pplications.com.au www.pplications.com.au +61 4 1374 3959Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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