Sunday 8 July 2007

`` Domain names – their significance ''

6 response
http://www.articleteller.com/Article/Domain-names---their-significance-and-types/65781
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Monday, July 09, 2007 1:09:45 PM
Domain names – their significance and types
Domains article brought to you by Lorenzo Modesto,
Posted on: 2007-06-13
[==>Social bookmark this page]

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Your domain name
is a easy to remember name
referring to your company name or product or services you are selling

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Choosing the correct domain name could mean
make or break for your online venture.
A domain name that
[-] is easy to remember,
[-] offers excellent branding opportunities,
[-] refers directly to your products and services or
[-] contains keywords that people generally use to search for similar products and services
could make a whole world of difference on how successful you are on the internet

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In fact
most companies or even individuals prefer registering their domains on all the available extensions
to help in branding
and exclusivity for the main domain name.

No matter what the extension you choose,
you should always choose your main domain name carefully
since it could make the biggest difference in success or failure of your online venture.

This Domains article is provided by Articleteller - The Free Article Directory
http://www.articleteller.com

Lorenzo Modesto started in the Internet industry in 1996 and has held executive positions in sales, marketing and business development at industry leading service providers. He is the Managing Director of Domains a domain registration company

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`` If a company has nothing but good reviews,then chances are that the reviews are fake. ''

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http://www.articleteller.com/Article/Domain-Name-and-Why-/59141
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Domain Name and Why?
Domains article brought to you by mistymin,
Posted on: 2007-04-18
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Starting with the domain name,
first you need to pick a subject for your site.
In this article, gardening will be the subject.

Keeping in mind the search engine optimization or seo
one of the first thing is to get key words for the subject.
Google has a good web master tool section that can help you with keywords
I put in the subject gardening in Google keyword search and this is what I found.
gardening better homes
garden indoor
gardening
gardening supplies
gardening tools
gardening gifts
gardening plants
gardening seeds
gardening flowers
gardening tips
Keep your keywords to only 10 and use them in your site, articles,
and the domain name.
Now we have the keywords what can we do for a domain name.
The site is about gardening tips.
The keyword gardening tips is one of the top search words.

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Last but not least, check out your hosting provider.
[-] How long have they been around?
[-] Are there any reviews on them?
[-] Are they all good or bad?
This could be an issue.
If a company has nothing but good reviews,
then chances are that the reviews are fake.
Remember, you can't please everyone all the time.

This Domains article is provided by Articleteller - The Free Article Directory
http://www.articleteller.com

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`` How To Choose A Domain Name? ''

1 response
http://www.articleteller.com/Article/How-To-Choose-A-Domain-Name-/58923
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How To Choose A Domain Name?
Domains article brought to you by Carson Danfield,
Posted on: 2007-04-16
[==>Social bookmark this page]

There's a saying in the Real Estate business -
they say that
the 3 most important things are location, location and location.
Well, in regards to a new internet business, it's
domain name,
domain name and
domain name.

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Why domain name is so important?

For one thing,
a domain name can help you to get traffic to your website. If you don't get traffic, you might as well not even have a website. There's no doubt about it, if you want to make money, you need traffic.

A domain name can help you to get traffic in a couple of ways.

First of all,
if your domain name is catchy and easy to remember,
that will help people to find your website
and to return for future visits.

It's also a good idea
if your domain name gives some indication of the type of business you have.
For example,
if you want to have a website that helps people consolidate their student loans,
it would be a good idea to have a domain name that contained some or all of those words.
You might do good with
"studentloans.com" or
"studentloanconsolidation.com" or something similar
You can even use hyphens in the domain name, like
"student-loan-consolidation.com", etc.
The point here is that your domain name should be descriptive of your business.
After all,
if you were looking for a new dentist,
would you be likely to visit "BigBubbaMotorcycles.com" or "GreatDentists.com"?
If Big Bubba is a dentist,
he's probably not going to get many new dental patients thru his website.
Let's speak about the domain names with hyphens before we move on.
Contrary to what many people think,
having hyphens in your domain name does not hurt your search engine listings.
Most of the search engines treat the hyphens as a space,
so the hyphens make it a little easier for them to separate out the individual words.
About the only downside of using hyphens is that
when people type in your URL,
they may forget to put in the hyphens and go to a competitors website instead.
Personally, I don't think this is too much of a problem,
since most people find websites thru search engines,
so they'll be clicking directly on a link to your website instead of typing it in by hand.
Again,
it's really important
to embed keywords about your business into your domain name
for good search engine ranking.

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Here's a good tip for you when trying to find a domain name that has your keywords in it - If you can't find a domain name that has your keyword and is still available, you should consider using sub-domain names instead. What's a sub-domain name? A sub-domain name is a prefix to a normal domain name. Let's say that you're in the retail computer business and you want to sell computers at your website. That's a fairly competitive business, so you'll probably have a hard time coming up with a good domain name that's not already taken. An alternative would be to choose some sort of generic term for a domain name and then use a sub-domain for your computer business.
For example,
let's say that you register the domain name "lowestprice.com"
That's pretty generic, wouldn't you agree?
Now that
you have that domain name registered,
you can create all the sub-domains you want,
limited only by your imagination and the size of your web hosting account.
Remembering that
you're in the computer business,
you could now have your website at the sub-domain
"computers.lowestprice.com"
Using this same approach,
you could go into just about any other business and have sub-domains like
"insurance.lowestprice.com" and so on.
See how it works?
Another good thing about sub-domains is that
they don't require registration.
You only pay to register the main domain name.
By using sub-domain names,
you can easily embed your keywords
and it won't cost you any more money.
And
the search engines treat each sub-domain as a totally separate entity,
so
your search engine ranking for one sub-domain won't be dependent upon
you having a high[[[[or-low]]]]] ranking for your main domain name.
[[[[[[[[[[ 'the edittor notes : ::::: i.e. a must for your SEO
]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]

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This Domains article is provided by Articleteller - The Free Article Directory
http://www.articleteller.com/

Author: Carson Danfield.
For more information about the domain name,visit SevenDollarSolution.com

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generic Domain The Perfect Domain

1 response
http://www.articleteller.com/Article/How-to-Choose-Perfect-Domain-Name-for-your-website-/58192
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How to Choose Perfect Domain Name for your website?
Domains article brought to you by Richa Sinha,
Posted on: 2007-04-10
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Generic Name-
It is very important to note, that
your domain name should match to your brand name or product name.
The very name that you use to advertise your product
is
the name that you will want for your domain,
because that is the first thing
that people will try in their browser.
It is also the easiest thing for them to remember, and
whatever that is easily remembered,
will be
more likely to be tried out than the obscure domain name.

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REPRINT RIGHTS statement: This article is free for republishing by visitors provided the Author Bio box is retained as usual so that all links are Active/Linkable with no syntax changes.
This Domains article is provided by Articleteller - The Free Article Directory http://www.articleteller.com
Author Richa Sinha is associated with Vexat Inc. Vexat provides the cheapest domain name registration and website hosting. View the services provided by Vexat Inc.

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`` A Perfect Domain Name ''

0 response
http://www.articleteller.com/Article/Choosing-A-Perfect-Domain-Name/60471
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Choosing A Perfect Domain Name

Domains article brought to you by GDTECHINDIA,
Posted on: 2007-04-29
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A memorable domain name is the best one,
because it sticks in the mind.
A perfect business name is a nice choice.
If you choose a phrase or sequence of the words that describes your product,
is also a good one,
for example, officestationery.com.
[[[[[[[[[ 'the edittor notes : ::::: i.e. the generic domains
]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]
The domain names that arouse a visual image can also be used
as these are easy to remember,
like
GreenValleyResort.com.
Short names are much better than the longer names,
but
if adding the length makes more memorable
then
you can choose the longer one.
You should make sure that
your domain name is easy to pronounce, and [[thence]] soon
you will hear people talking about your domain name
many times a day,
in conversation,
on the phone, or
in other radio ads.
It is better to
avoid the name that only works in print,
and also needs to be spelled out when spoken aloud to be understood

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This Domains article is provided by Articleteller - The Free Article Directory
http://www.articleteller.com/

Mahesh Kumar is working as a Project Manager at GDTECHINDIA.
The Company offers cheap domain names and offers promotional schemes for .info and .org domain names.
There are various offers for Domain Name Resellers with Quality Hosting.
For more information visit GDTECHINDIA

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```` Exact Match Domain Names in Google ''''' by SEObook

0 response
[[[[[[[[[ 'the edittor notes : :::::
bcause[because]
v[we] have much coloured + editted the following quoted message from SEObook
4[for] easiest reading ,
thus ,
v[we] advise u strongly to visit
http://www.seobook.com/archives/001860.shtml 4[for] originnal text
to do the comparison , sorry4inconveniency ,
+
dont trust us , trust the originnal ,;--^),
ThANKye 4[for] any attendancy , 2w
---------
btw ,
v'd[we-would] like2recommend SEObook for your site's SEO ,
bcause[because] they 'get' it
]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]
----------------------------------------------------------------
[[[[[[[[[ the relationship between SEO n[and] generic domain
's
just like the family of man n[and] woman ,
just only man n[and] woman combined 2gether[together]
brings in the fruitssssssful offsprings ,
o k o k , i know i know ,;--^),
the gay men can also go2gether2form[go-together-to-form]
the great family , 2[too] , but , u know .........
.........
indeed
indeep ,
the just-above-mentionned thesis is the old old x,000-years-old
traditionnal Chinese wisdom ,
i.e.
yin[=woman] +
yan[=yang=man] = the best of west(;=best;),
o k , please let me put it in an other way ,
yin[=woman] +
yan[=yang=man] = 1 + 1 = 3 or even 4 or even 5 e.t.c.
o k ,
old's gold ,;--^),
sorry , this rule's just 2[too] good [4me]2clear here
]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]

http://www.seobook.com/archives/001860.shtml
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Exact Match Domain Names in Google
Sep
27
[[2006]]

Search relevancy algorithms are ever changing,
but I recently snagged a good example
of Google placing significant weight on exact matching domain names.
When you search Google for search engine history
there are over
20,000 exact phrase match pages and over 90,000,000 matching pages. The
#6 result in this screenshot is SearchEngineHistory.com,
which is a site that I never really developed.
It has no inbound links on Yahoo!, Google, or MSN
(as you can see on this screenshot and that one).

Also worth noting that
SearchEngineHistory.com is a single page site, and with NO link authority
it outranks a LifeHacker post
that has the exact matching phrase in a page title
(and LifeHacker is an extremely authoritative site)

Why could Google trust domain matches so much?
Because they are often associated with brands which protect their trademarks more vigilantly than in the past,
and there are so many domainers and so much vc money placing premiums on domain names.
To get an exact matching domain it is probably going to cost you something
(either lots of money
or the foresight to be an early believer in a new field)
so that in and of itself is some sign of quality.

For example,
today I tried buying a non-word 5 letter domain for $1,000 and the domainer turned me down stating that he turned down 5x that much last week. About 3 years ago SeoBook.com cost $8, largely because the standard frame of thought in the SEO market was that there was no market for a book or ebook.

Posted in: seo tips

by Aaron Wall

Your Thoughts? [ 58 ]

September 27, 2006

comments

Yep,
I noticed the same thing and alot of friends noticed it too.
Keywords within the domain in any match tend to rank good at the moment

Google will probably change this soon, because it doesn't work.

Peter van der Graaf on September 28, 2006 02:25 AM

Sorry Aaron,

I don't have the same results at google.com, maybe you find your site listed because of your "tweaked" version or because the site is only listed in some countries.

But I agree with you,
it looks like that exact keywords can help you listing in the results of Google.

Olaf on September 28, 2006 02:30 AM

Again sorry to report that I cant find that domain in the first 5 pages of the SERPs. Checking from Ireland.
In fact, this post appears on page 5.

But as with above replies, it does seem that
if you hit the exact keyword phrase mapped to domain Google gives you a bump

Richard on September 28, 2006 03:28 AM

This happened for my domain for a while,
until someone with the .net version of my domain started getting lots of incoming links... The domain is just my name, which I am not trying to market strongly at all - and that leads me to a question.

You offer a service, and have a domain containing good keywords for that service eg 'ohio plumber.com' (making this up)

You also have your relatively unknown name (just based on your own name) as a domain name.

Both sites point to the same site. Which site do you use as the primary site, and then 301 the other to remove duplication issues?

Do you promote the keyword domain, and just 301 the other domain, or vice versa?
(hope that question made sense)

Michael Phipps on September 28, 2006 03:52 AM

Aaron, you just confirmed me, what I thought in the past three months too

Damn it.
Now all spammers will get tens of domains.

Cristian Mezei on September 28, 2006 04:37 AM

the results I get for this query are the same in Google.com and Google.nl,
the site rank first place.

K.ching on September 28, 2006 04:51 AM

Hi Aaron

I wouldnt want to comment about Google as most of my sites are too young and Im up against (working on !) the sandbox effect here...as the sites are in an extremely competitive keyword market.

But
for MSN search it seems relatively easy in the short term to get good ranking
on the search query / domain name exact match.

Within 1 month of launching one site
I was at the top of the list on msn.fr (I live in France) for the query
"promotion sejour" or
"promotion sejours"...
and these are 2 highly sought-after keywords in France.
Would you agree here ?

Oh and BTW...if im ranking up there its because I followed the advice on your "SEO hints and tips" on your other site (the one with the photo) !! :o)

Paul

Paul Evans on September 28, 2006 05:47 AM




"the foresight to be an early believer in a new field"

Yep, a good domain name can work wonders.
podpress.org gets all of its search engine visitors from one SE and for a one word search term ...
can you guess what it is?

Dave on September 28, 2006 10:59 AM

I'm not convinced.

First of all, 20,000 exact matches is not all that
competitive,
compared to say 448,000,000 for "real estate" or 59,900,000 exact matches for "paris hilton."

Second, your threadwatch post outranking searchenginehistory.com should tell you something about how difficult it is to rank for that phrase.

Third, you're ruling out on-page factors. If the page was blank, I'd be less sceptical.

Fourth,

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&safe=off&q=%22engine+history%22&btnG=Search
The domain doesn't come up for "engine history." Though the threadwatch and lifehacker post shows up on the first page. Why not?

Halfdeck on September 28, 2006 11:49 AM

Interesting find. I see it #9 here in Canada at google.com.
Where is it linked from (the cache date is sept 16 so it can't be from this post)?

Brian on September 28, 2006 11:54 AM

I'd say
the emphasis in trust on keyword domains is a result of a fix that NEEDED to occur
because of sites not ranking for their own name.

Sites not ranking for their own name was a sign of poor relevancy that the AVERAGE USER would piss and moan about.
The solution
- put some more trust on the keyword domain

- the unintended side effect
- the value of keyword domains rises again for exact match queries.

Todd on September 28, 2006 11:54 AM



``Sites not ranking for their own name was a sign of poor relevancy that the
AVERAGE USER would piss and moan about''

Totally agree Stunty.
This was a way for them to deemphisize and filter anchor text without hurting relevancy too much.



``Where is it linked from''
Maybe nowhere, or one stray link, but that is the point. I think it may have once had a link and lost it?



``Second, your threadwatch post outranking searchenginehistory.com should tell you
something about how difficult it is to rank for that phrase''

Who the fuck would expect a single page site with NO LINKS ranking
ahead
of a fresh page
on a PageRank 7 domain
with over a hundred thousand backlinks?
And yet it does
(or at least for a while did)
outrank a post on the highly trusted PR7 LifeHacker.



``The domain doesn't come up for "engine history." Though the threadwatch and
lifehacker post shows up on the first page. Why not?''
Because
that is not an exact match. That is the whole point of this post.

aaron wall on September 28, 2006 12:10 PM

I've been enjoying this domain name benefit for awhile now.
If you think Google is taking this too far,
check MSN
(or Live, or whatever they'll call themselves tomorrow)

darren on September 28, 2006 01:17 PM

Aaron, while I totally agree with this post
and I'm seeing that
domain matches have been an increasingly pretty significant factor,
there are a couple of caveats:

Exact domain name does not equal trust. But, exact domain name plus age does. Your site is 2+ years old and hasn't changed much. Google turned the trust knob up on you.

Penalties, even smaller ones,seem to outweigh this factor. I have a 4 year old non-unique domain (a brandname even) with tens of thousands of IBLs that was penalized last month (and I know why it was too), but not a major violation because I still have a lot of my rankings. However, it was dumped to #33 for a query for the unique brandname/domain.

Jason on September 28, 2006 01:48 PM

Ha, just today I saw this in action for a nice 2 word phrase, site at #2 was keyword-keyword.net and was a hosting placeholder page.

Jim Boykin on September 28, 2006 02:18 PM

How old is that search engine history site Aaron? The reason I ask is it might be that when the site was indexed there were very few exact phrases of "search engine history" in the index, yes?

In other words, being there first and filling the slot.

Aaron Pratt on September 28, 2006 02:33 PM

I also noticed this with Yahoo! A site I run (businessplandocs.com) hasn't even been up for a year and has a PR of only 2, but when you search for business plan docs on Yahoo! It is number one.

Amy Serbonich on September 28, 2006 02:54 PM

All the resources linked to on that page (many of which were about search engine history) were around in 2004, when I put up that page.

aaron wall on September 28, 2006 05:19 PM

I personally don't like the shift into more importance on the domain name. It gives an unfair advantage, and now instead of concentrating on a cool site and content, I have to waste time digging through keyword niches and domains to find some lame version of "myphrase.com".

Anthony Ettinger on September 28, 2006 06:17 PM

Hi Guys

I have a theory about ranking based on the timeliness of when your content appears and when the SE indexes it.
My experience leads me to believe that they put a decent weight on sites that produce particular content 1st or in the top 10-20.

Im basing this on a site/business I recently sold which still outranks a large US networking company for some of its products.

Wheneven said company released a new product within a day or so I would go grab all the content from their page, reformat it and put it on my page including all the data sheets, case studies etc (we were actually certified resellers of their products so I dont at all feel bad about this)

For the last 2 years my small Australian business with PR4 ranked above their site for queries on some of their products and in the first 10 results for most of their products we were trying to sell.

We had good links (geniune) and decent PR and a 7 year old domain (our main domain was not keyword related to the networking company) and great on page SEO work.

My belief was that we got all the above stuff right but so did our competitors, but due to the fact that we always had the new content indexed within a few days of the product being announced we got brownie points for this.
Hope this adds something to the discussion, I also owned about 5-6 domain names with their brand names which were pointed at the individual pages, but dont feel this made much difference.

Mike

Mike Nicholls on September 28, 2006 09:29 PM

Jim said: "Ha, just today I saw this in action for a nice 2 word phrase, site at #2 was keyword-keyword.net and was a hosting placeholder page."

...and I had just about the exact same thing happen for a very nice phrase, only there was no hyphen in the domain and it in fact ranked #1, ahead of a site with a ton of trust at #2. Now this site (#1) did have a decent number of backlinks. Nowhere near the #2 site's number, but as the #1 site was a GoDaddy placeholder page I assumed it was an expired domain someone grabbed up.

Jon Payne on September 29, 2006 09:50 AM

"All the resources linked to on that page (many of which were about search engine history) were around in 2004, when I put up that page."

If I had put up a single page title search-engine-history.html in 2004 it would also outrank entire new websites.

Aaron Pratt on September 29, 2006 07:18 PM

Too bad you didn't put that theory to test.

aaron wall on September 29, 2006 09:02 PM

You are in luck, I watched my sage feed reader closely and blogged about "Fresher Query Stats" yesterday and guess what? I am currently #2 in Google for that phrase, why? I blogged it first. Your old domain domained it first. It's the same for all words and the combinations of...no reason to complicate the obvious.

Aaron Pratt on September 30, 2006 12:54 AM

Hey there,
I love your site, and read it regularly, but keep on forgetting about it because your RSS feeds are basic summaries! I would love for you to syndicate fullfeeds ( see http://www.fullfeeds.com/ )
btw, I have known about this trick for a long time :)

Lee on September 30, 2006 06:20 PM

How does your test prove that the first one to write a phrase ranks for it? That may be some component of the algorithm, but certainly couldn't be given the most weight given that old content is old (and in some cases that means it is irrelevant), many sites discuss a topic over and over again only to have some newer pages rank ahead of older pages about the same topic, and scraper sites and automated content generation tools would get a huge boost if just by being the first to use some specific phrase you got a huge relevancy boost.

aaron wall on September 30, 2006 11:11 PM

yes, i agree 100% that google does still give alot of importance to exact domain names which match the keywords people are searching for.

Seo Rock Blog on October 1, 2006 01:13 PM

I've run into that exact situation in my industry. We're buying up domain names for some upcoming changes.

Stephen Snyder on October 1, 2006 02:56 PM

Aaron:
Any idea if this Google love will continue if you 301 the domain name to another site? It's one thing if we need to maintain a unique site for each the particular phrase, quite another if we can get that kind of SERP boost by buying keyword specific domains and redirecting them.

TheROIGuy on October 1, 2006 08:30 PM

The results I am getting for a non-SEO'd client domain seem to back up what Aaron is theorising.

www.beesnees.com.au ranks #1 for 'beesnees' and #2 for 'bees nees'

The domain is quite new and has only a few inlinks.

alixta on October 1, 2006 11:29 PM

If I make the same search today (2nd October) on Google in Portugal, I don't have anymore the exact domain match and your blog now appear on 1st page.

Mac

MAC SEO on October 2, 2006 07:14 AM

If I make the same search today (2nd October) on Google in Portugal, I don't have anymore the exact domain match and your blog now appear on 1st page.

Mac

Mac SEO on October 2, 2006 07:16 AM

If I make the same search today (2nd October) on Google in Portugal, I don't have anymore the exact domain match and your blog now appear on 1st page.

Mac

MAC SEO on October 2, 2006 07:16 AM

If I make the same search today (2nd October) on Google in Portugal, I don't have anymore the exact domain match and your blog now appear on 1st page.

Mac

MAC SEO on October 2, 2006 07:18 AM

It appears you're not in the top 30 on Google anymore. Weird?

What about domain names with "hyphens"? Have they devalued domain names, such as http://www.searh-engine-history.com/?

JP Richards on October 2, 2006 08:32 PM

Aaron,
Sorry for my repeated comments yesterday, but they were caused by time-out and page resend.
I apolagyse for any trouble

Regards

Manuel

MAC SEO on October 3, 2006 08:36 AM

I have never had that much success with exact name matches in Google. I don't understand Google. I rank in the top three for several competitive search terms on just about every search engine but Google. I am not even in the top 100 in Google. If you go to Google and type in one of these terms you get a bunch of .edu and .gov sites. But it seems like they are shooting themselves in the foot ranking these particular sites so high. Click on two of them and you get a redirect page, another 404, and another loads of jargon about some law affecting 1% of specialists in the industry. In the top 5 I can see one site that the majority of people would find useful. I am going to keep playing the game but I wish I could figure out how Google thinks or see them dethroned - i dont like my odds in either case.

Charles Martin on October 3, 2006 12:36 PM

Although Google might be doing this presently I don't think this has any lasting value. Google will change when they figure out that spammers will get on the latest hot keyword but provide no real content related to it. Content will always be king!

Erich on October 3, 2006 02:36 PM

What browser plugin or whatever have you got that puts the details like "page rank, age, links etc" under each search result in google - as per your screen captures?

Mike on October 3, 2006 08:24 PM

Mike, it's Aaron's own SEO for Firefox extension - you can find it by clicking TOOLS on the menu at the top of this page.
It's good...BUT at the moment it only works for me in Yahoo, not Google. Don't know why.
Have fun!

Alan on October 4, 2006 12:53 AM

it seems the domain's age have more relevancy

carlos on October 4, 2006 06:20 AM

100% correct article...
I just wrote abut the same toppic in myindustry last month:
http://jobireland.blogspot.com/2006/09/why-does-development-of-recruitment-web.html

Job Ireland on October 4, 2006 02:36 PM

Hey Aaron:
I just wanted to say that I read your article and all the posts and I saw the following incident...




The domain doesn't come up for "engine history." Though the threadwatch and
lifehacker post shows up on the first page. Why not?





Aaron Wall:
Because that is not an exact match. That is the whole point of this
post.


That guy really further proved your point.

I get very annoyed when many of theses comments responded saying things like: Yes keyword domains in general are favored very much so in google

The point is not that google favored keyword rich domains such as i.e. seobook.com is favored for the keyword "seo"but... rather seo.com is favored for the keyword "seo" since this is an exact match.

The point here is that you can achieve nice search results in the search engines if you buy a quality 3 word domain, and rank for those 3 words. The reason why this is such as great idea is because while buying something like seo.com would most likely be way to[[too]] expensive for most people, on the other hand- buying a keyword rich and high search volume 3 word domain name, is certainly possible to find at a few thousand dollar price range if your search enough. It is the domains like searchenginehistory.com which are perhaps hidden gems.

Think about it:
Look at the opportunity for cash parking entreprenours looking to ranke out good dough by investing in one of those 3 word gems, and putting in a bit of work to have them rank.

One more comment I have:
obviously a 3 word gem is only a gem if it has aged for a few years,
otherwise it does not have trust.
This should go without saying because otherwise we can all buy searchenginehistory.mobi and achieve killer rankings. That would not be fair.

Certainly adding a domain like searchenginehistory.com to the first page in the results list- adds because it shows a sign of quality. The search engines should respect exact match premium domains, because they are relevant to the keywords involved, and therefor are unique to that term.

Great article. I am blown away...

ken on October 5, 2006 10:57 PM

hm...i think the domain's age n the domain both also relevancy

calson on October 5, 2006 11:29 PM

I dont know but i think that google shoudl keep it the same way
because
most of the time exact name domain matches are pretty relevent to what you are serching for.

Jared on October 6, 2006 12:29 AM

I definitely agree with your Jared.
When your own an exact match domain
it is almost as if you own that particular feild.

The exact match domains are definitely offering something to the search results
which is why google and other search engines too, such as yahoo, msn/live, and ask all respect them.

So even if searchenginehistory.com is full of b.s. spam links, still becuase if this premium name the site adds something to the search results- and deserves to be listed- sort of speak.

ken on October 6, 2006 01:11 AM

Hello Everyone,

This is the exact idea I had a couple of years ago, but the software only came out in the summer of this year.
Here is a video of David Frey showing how he has done with this tool.
http://oork.com/mqfh4

The bottom line is that is works as that is what the search engines want to see if all things are equal.

Rod

Rod Beckwith on October 7, 2006 12:33 AM

I didn't think Google paid much attention to keywords in domains
until
I registered a city+ymca.com type domain and then forgot to change the DNS servers to my own.
Upon searching for city + ymca in Google
#1
is my domain with the hosting company parking page
which beat many articles about this particular ymca.

John Gall on October 8, 2006 04:52 PM

from y expeirience exact match can work ont only on the domain name but also on sub directories for example : /budgethotels/ can give back high ranking for the keywords budget hotels. It's not as good as the domian name but still good.

Tel Aviv Guy on October 9, 2006 08:30 AM

I tried to sift through the entire comments section, so sorry if I missed it, but I don't think anyone mentioned the fact that the external links Aaron has listed on the page link to good resources on the subject. In other words, don't you think the site is acting like a hub?

Also, the site is floating for me. It was there the first time I searched, but has since diappeared.

Justin on October 9, 2006 04:55 PM

I rank first in a high competitive one word phrase in a non-english website and don´t have the name of the phrase in my domain name, altough it is in the name of the html page. It´s a high quality website, with lots of good content. It´s 6 years old and update the site 3 or 4 times per week with about 60 high quality articles per week provided by users. I verify personally grammar and make sure it´s high quality each article before posting on my website.

But, the domain names wich are in 2 and 3 positions
do have the one phrase in its domain.
It means, having the phrase in domain name is useful,
altough a website with high quality content, good age and updating regularly like mine overcome this problem.
Always focuse on quality and good rankings will come alone.

Cyber Angel on October 10, 2006 02:16 AM

Is it just as effective having keyword rich domain names and using them as domain aliases or should they be separate websites that link to your main domain, or even a redirect. What say you?

Jason Fetko on October 10, 2006 04:40 PM

I've actually pulled a number one position out of the hat in less than 2 weeks, using a brand new domain name, and one web page - and NO incoming links
(although that has changed now)
[[[[[[[[[ 'the edittor notes : :::::
that has changed now
bcause
because simply
that domain had n'o[no] concrete content ,
despite that domain's quite nice
]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]

My Niche keyword doesn't have many search results, but still,
as a new entrant,
and with nothing more than the keyword in the title of the page,
and about 300 words of text,
I was able to land the number one position.
The domain name I am using is a keyword.
I think in more competitive markets, this wouldn't have been as possible,
but it was really easy to snap a number one position quickly just using the keyword in the domain.

BTW - still looking for a comment on whether it is better to redirect a keyword domain to a branded domain, or go the other way around.

My thoughts are if you use the keyword domain as your primary domain, when people want to link to it, they'll grab the url from the address bar, which will contain the keyword domain. What are your thoughts?

Michael Phipps on October 10, 2006 05:43 PM

Great term Aaron, I liked it so much i registered exactmatchdomains.com and blogged about it too.
thanks!

Eric Shannon on October 12, 2006 04:36 PM

Hi,
Came across this linked in a forum as
I have been trying to work out why
my site has been doing a lot better than I expected at this early stage
as I am still working on my site
and
it is not ready for the public yet
even though I have it online.
Figured by doing that by the time I was ready that I may of been lucky enough to at least be listed.
Aaron, your article explains it

I snagged 'familybasedimmigration.com' on 24 sept 2006.
I was actually quite surprised it was available.

I have been ranking much better than I expected
and
being new to all of this hadn't even thought of keywords used in this manner.

Just took a look at the stats after downloading Aarons SEO for Firefox extension and did find that
other sites are linking me. I am such a newb, I have no idea why???

On a search of 'family based immigration', this is the result...

Google - ranked 14th out of 4,150,000 results

Yahoo - ranked 16th out of 9,560,000 results

MSN - ranked 4th out of 417,232 pages

I would like to be #1 eventually but I think I am going to be hard pressed against the US government site lol

I'm not complaining though.

Thanks for the article Aaron.

Lorelle on November 7, 2006 05:16 AM

Keywords in domain do help a little bit in ranking well in search engines,
but it's not the only thing that can ensure high rankings.
If the domain has exact keywords in it it would rank somewhere on top
but i guess the domain age also plays an important role in that scenario.

Ryan on December 30, 2006 10:34 AM

I saw this article on
http://www.SubliminalMessages.Com and I agree
that
the better your domain name,
the better your location on the net and among search engine results.
Location,
Location,
Location. What part don't you understand, my friend?

Sam on June 6, 2007 12:29 AM

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