
Is Your Domain Name SEO Friendly?
by Rick Carbone
When setting up
your website be sure to include your domain name in your
optimization strategy.
The selection of a domain name has become very
important in the bid for search engine placement. This
article discusses the reasons why.
Search engine optimization and
domains
When you first start an Internet business one of
the first items on the list, after you've written your
business model, is getting a domain name. In years past it
wasn't as difficult to find a decent name for your site.
Today however, it's not as easy to get your dot com name.
The process of registering a name has improved
substantially but the availability for descriptive names
is far more difficult. Why is this a problem you may ask?
It's more of a problem for small and home business sites
than it is for larger companies. The reason is simple and
I can sum it up in one word: money.
Larger companies, especially public companies
have the funding to advertise their new sites, therefore
they don't really need to have names that reflect the
type of business they are in. I can site a perfect
example, Go Daddy.com,
has absolutely nothing to do with the type of business
GoDaddy.com is in.
But being the largest register of domain names, GoDaddy
can advertise on all media levels to get business
including buying advertising time on the Super Bowl! If
you are starting a home based business on the Internet,
I'll bet that you won't be buying time on television not
to mention next year's Super Bowl.

Okay, where am I going with all of this? You are
on a limited budget when you start your business and you
must rely on free traffic to your site, because without
traffic you have no business. This is what I described in
my article on organic traffic a few weeks ago. In order
to get substantial traffic to your site you'll need to
have an optimized site. This all has to do with keywords
and something called keyword density. You achieve this by
having your most important keywords dispersed throughout
your website and your domain name. (See I did come to the
point of this article.)
Most SEO, search
engine optimization, programs first look at the domain
name and your major keywords. They look to see if your
domain name and site title have any commonality. If they
do your site receives extra points in the SEO algorithm,
(a logical step-by-step procedure for solving a
mathematical problem in a finite number of steps, often
involving repetition of the same basic operation.) I hope
that I haven't lost you here because all of this is very
important, especially to home based Internet business
owners.
Most SEO
programs will constantly refer back to
the domain name and those words which match the dominate
keyword phrases that you have chosen. When your site is
optimized, search engines will pick up your scent, so to
speak, and you will have great placement and positioning
on searches that have your keywords. All of this amounts
to substantial traffic, that's free.

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