Domain name opinion
-
@eddiejennings said in Domain name opinion:
All of these were inexpensive, so I own them all for the next year :).
That's great, short .coms are hard to come by. I think you got lucky on that one!
-
It's true that the longer version may be a pain in the ass to type, but what is going to be easier for your clients to remember? Even with the longer domain, once someone sends you an email, their email client will likely remember the address and autocomplete. For yourself if the email is used across multiple other sites as login ID, you likely have a password manager so that'll also complete. If I were a client, it would be easier to remember the longer domain instead of the one with a non-standard TLD.
-
@obsolesce said in Domain name opinion:
I like ejsllc.com if available.
Definitely this one. We need a polling system in ML for things like this.
-
I think I agree, the shorter one is best.
-
@nerdydad said in Domain name opinion:
@obsolesce said in Domain name opinion:
I like ejsllc.com if available.
Definitely this one. We need a polling system in ML for things like this.
Polls without explanation are worse than having nothing. They don't represent the information that they seem to give and can give very misleading results, as we've seen.
-
What about edjennings.co?
Short domains are nice, but abbreviations can be harder to remember.
-
@irj said in Domain name opinion:
What about edjennings.co?
Short domains are nice, but abbreviations can be harder to remember.
[email protected] seems like the world's worst domain name option ever.
-
@dustinb3403 said in Domain name opinion:
@irj said in Domain name opinion:
What about edjennings.co?
Short domains are nice, but abbreviations can be harder to remember.
[email protected] seems like the world's worst domain name option ever.
The same can be said for eddiejenningservices.com
-
@irj said in Domain name opinion:
@dustinb3403 said in Domain name opinion:
@irj said in Domain name opinion:
What about edjennings.co?
Short domains are nice, but abbreviations can be harder to remember.
[email protected] seems like the world's worst domain name option ever.
The same can be said for eddiejenningservices.com
True, which is why I'd opt to not using my name for my LLC. . . but hey. . . this isn't my LLC. .
-
@dustinb3403 said in Domain name opinion:
@irj said in Domain name opinion:
@dustinb3403 said in Domain name opinion:
@irj said in Domain name opinion:
What about edjennings.co?
Short domains are nice, but abbreviations can be harder to remember.
[email protected] seems like the world's worst domain name option ever.
The same can be said for eddiejenningservices.com
True, which is why I'd opt to not using my name for my LLC. . . but hey. . . this isn't my LLC. .
Right, but whatever you choose for your business name should be clear in the URL. In think if you tell people six letters in a domain, it's harder to remember vs remembering your name.
-
@nashbrydges said in Domain name opinion:
It's true that the longer version may be a pain in the ass to type, but what is going to be easier for your clients to remember? Even with the longer domain, once someone sends you an email, their email client will likely remember the address and autocomplete. For yourself if the email is used across multiple other sites as login ID, you likely have a password manager so that'll also complete. If I were a client, it would be easier to remember the longer domain instead of the one with a non-standard TLD.
That's my point. Those Six letters aren't memorable
-
Edjtech.co and ejtech.co are available as well. It's short but easier to remember.
-
It is easy to remember... it's like saying "e-jay's LLC" .com: ejsllc.com
-
@irj said in Domain name opinion:
@nashbrydges said in Domain name opinion:
It's true that the longer version may be a pain in the ass to type, but what is going to be easier for your clients to remember? Even with the longer domain, once someone sends you an email, their email client will likely remember the address and autocomplete. For yourself if the email is used across multiple other sites as login ID, you likely have a password manager so that'll also complete. If I were a client, it would be easier to remember the longer domain instead of the one with a non-standard TLD.
That's my point. Those Six letters aren't memorable
but they are easier to tell/advertise. and when the site is hit, it can redirect to the full name.
-
@obsolesce said in Domain name opinion:
It is easy to remember... it's like saying "e-jay's LLC" .com: ejsllc.com
That was also my thought.
-
@jaredbusch said in Domain name opinion:
@obsolesce said in Domain name opinion:
It is easy to remember... it's like saying "e-jay's LLC" .com: ejsllc.com
That was also my thought.
That domain is already stuck in my head... damnit.
-
But to answer the general question. using LLC in the domain name is just bad sounding period.
Use something like @IRJ mentioned
@irj said in Domain name opinion:
Edjtech.co and ejtech.co are available as well. It's short but easier to remember.
I am pretty sure my partner and I owned ejtech.com back in 2003, but that business never went anywhere.
-
@dustinb3403 said in Domain name opinion:
True, which is why I'd opt to not using my name for my LLC
Me too. The whole point of having an LLC is legal separation from personal assets.
-
@aaronstuder said in Domain name opinion:
@dustinb3403 said in Domain name opinion:
True, which is why I'd opt to not using my name for my LLC
Me too. The whole point of having an LLC is legal separation from personal assets.
Well the two are still separated, but in a lawsuit who is being sued. The business or the person?
-
@eddiejennings the first one that popped in my head was EdJennings.com