Rank Magic

How to Choose a Domain Name for Your Small Business

Your domain name is important

Your domain name is important. Choose it wisely.

When you’re creating a website for a new business, think carefully about the domain name for your website. It’ll represent your business in a unique way and it will become as important a branding consideration as your company name.

You want it to reflect your company, but there are several other considerations as well.

Decide on your top level domain.

This is the suffix at the end of your website address. Businesses should normally have a .com top level domain (TLD). But there are exceptions. Internet-based businesses, like web designers, may want a .net TLD. Not for-profit businesses and trade organizations may be best served by a .org TLD. And of course colleges and universities qualify for a .edu TLD.  Also consider that the Search Engine Institute recommends avoiding .info domain names claiming that they have a reputation for being spammy websites.  Learn more about TLDs here.

Start with your company name

Does it lend itself to a unique domain name for your website? Or does another business already have a domain name that matches your company name?

Consider including keywords

If your name includes keywords, so much the better. Jones Brothers Plumbing Co. might choose JonesPlumbing.com or JonesBrothersPlumbing.com. The keyword is likely to be slightly helpful in search rankings.

You can also think about geographic keywords — like MorristownPlumbers.com. But don’t get carried away with something  like MorristownNewJerseyPlumbingAndHeating.com.

My 5 rules for a good domain name

I wrote about five rules for choosing a domain name more than ten years ago, and I’m happy to say they seem to have stood the test of time.

  1. Easy to remember
  2. Hard to misspell
  3. Make it a .com TLD
  4. Avoid hyphens
  5. Shorter is better than longer.

Beyond this, you may find that the domain name you’ve chosen has already been taken. It may be in use, or it may be held by a squatter who ill happily sell it to you for an exorbitant fee. If that happens, you may find some help in this article from Search Engine Journal: What to Do When the .COM You Want Is Taken.

Consider your domain name thoughtfully

And finally, look at your domain name with a careful eye. Make sure you don’t choose an unfortunate domain name that can be easily or disastrously mis-read. I have a few surprisingly bad examples here.

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