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information Do Companies in China use Hyphenated Domain Names?

NameSilo
When it comes to the use of hyphens in domain names, there isn't a global convention. A hyphen in a domain is generally not preferred in the U.S. but commonly used in countries like Japan. Bill Hartzer has written about the negative impact of hyphenated domains on search engine ranking.

Naturally, I thought it would be interesting to research whether there are companies in China running their business(es) on hyphenated domain names. I conducted a small survey with the letter-hyphen-letter pattern (L-L) of .cn domain names, which included 676 domain names. I wrote a small program to generate L-L names, and then I visited their websites one by one. For the first lot, I generated a total of 130 names, starting from a-a, a-b, ..., a-z to e-a, e-b, ..., e-z.

What a surprise! I found so many companies already actively using hyphenated domain names that I decided not to check the remaining 546 domain names. Instead, I spent some time looking at some of the websites I found, and I've included four examples to show how Chinese companies use and value their hyphenated domain names.

A-J.cn
Ai Jia is a kitchen cabinet and closet maker founded in 2002. It is one of the pioneers in the "green home" industry. A-J is an abbreviation for the company name, so the domain name is a good match. The website has a modern and sleek design. A Whois search revealed that the domain was registered in 2005, a year later than that of AJ.cn, which is owned by Chinese domain registrar eName. This suggests that the hyphenated name could be a second choice for the company. AJ.cn has a landing page only.

C-C.cn
Cheng Cheng Electric manufactures switch gears and electrical equipment. The company was founded in 1986 and controls a group of subsidiaries. The website is in Chinese and English. The domain name was registered in 2003 and matches the company name. CC.cn appears to be owned by an unrelated person and listed for sale.

C-M.cn
CM is a registered trademark and marketing service to help Internet retailers capitalize on the massively popular WeChat platform in China. The service is run by a company called Qi Bo. C-M.cn was registered in 2005 and CM.cn appears to be owned by an unrelated person. CM.cn shows eName's domain search and sale page.

D-W.cn
Daili Wang is a portal of general agencies run by Tianxin Software. Daili Wang literally means "agency net." The domain name was registered in 2009 and matches the name of the service. DW.cn was registered in 2003; the domain name is owned by a Beijing-based company called Qian Qin but it does not resolve.

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After reviewing these results, we can see that short, hyphenated domain names are viable in China. However, further study is required to find out whether this applies to longer, Pinyin names as well.



This article was inspired by a question from @briguy. Special thanks go to the NamePros editing team for their general help and support.
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Informative article, thank you Kassey!
 
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you can also search google for "site:*-1.cn" (with no quotes) to find sites on whatever-1.cn domains, for example
or "site:a-*.cn" for a-whatever.cn domains..

just replace 1 and a with your favorite letters/numbers...
there are tons of them
 
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you can also search google for "site:*-1.cn" (with no quotes) to find sites on whatever-1.cn domains, for example
or "site:a-*.cn" for a-whatever.cn domains..

just replace 1 and a with your favorite letters/numbers...
there are tons of them
I knew how to use site:name.* to check various extensions, but I didn't know you can also do that with name. Thanks for your great tip.
 
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you can also search google for "site:*-1.cn" (with no quotes) to find sites on whatever-1.cn domains

What the...! I had no idea '*' still functioned! For some reason I stopped using it when the '+' thing changed. What a dummkopf I am sometimes!

Thank you for the information!
 
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Very good to know, thank you for your time and input pertaining to China.
 
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@Kassey what are your thoughts on 'Shuiwu li'? Any value in this?
 
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always useful insights, thanks
 
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@Kassey what are your thoughts on 'Shuiwu li'? Any value in this?

ShuiWu can be:
税务>Tax affairs
which is good.

Li
There are too many possible Pinyin words, but I can't find a good one that flows well with the first part.

Baidu does suggest:
Shui Wuli:水物理>Water physics
Is it how you interpret it? How did you acquire this domain name?
 
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I used goggle translate for the phrase 'Tax force'. Shuiwu li with intonation marks was what came out. And that was how i arrived at this name.
 
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ShuiWu can be:
税务>Tax affairs
which is good.

Li
There are too many possible Pinyin words, but I can't find a good one that flows well with the first part.

Baidu does suggest:
Shui Wuli:水物理>Water physics
Is it how you interpret it? How did you acquire this domain name?


I used Goggle translate and another online translator for the phrase 'Tax force'. Shuiwu li was what came out. And that how i arrived at the name.
 
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Great research Kassey. Thanks for that :)

Now I am more confident of getting decent price for my domain 888-888.com in future.
 
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I used Goggle translate and another online translator for the phrase 'Tax force'. Shuiwu li was what came out. And that how i arrived at the name
Sorry, can't help.
 
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I had owned the domain 2-2.com and had submitted to 4.cn to list it for open auction (this was less then a year ago, I've since sold it to someone non-Asian). They rejected it for auction because they said nobody in China wants a hyphenated domain.
 
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Getting a L-L.cn for regfee and using it locally, is a long way from selling L-L.com to Chinese for premium pricing. IMHO.
 
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I was oubid recently on namejet for a n-n-n.com, and guess where it is now - points to a Chinese site.
 
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I was oubid recently on namejet for a n-n-n.com, and guess where it is now - points to a Chinese site.

Suddenly I have even more confidence in my 88-48.com. :D
 
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@TheBaldOne - Any chance you can reveal the domain and the price?
 
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Another well researched and informative article! Thanks for answering my question, looking forward to more similar articles
 
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@stub - It was 6-0-0.com (just checked and the page it points to has now changed from when I first checked on it a couple of days after the auction). The price was low (bottom $200+), the bidder and I were the only bidders for the domain and in the auction. I was bidding against their earlier placed bid and was using the extended 5 minute periods to up my bid. I had to take a call and missed getting in subsequent bids.

Anyway those are the details, unfortunately not a $x,xxx kind of bidding but still one to note.
 
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L-L availability. just did a quick scan:

.com/net/org all taken... who would doubt that..
.biz - around 30 without e,u,i,o,a,v out of 400 avail
.co - around 50 without e,u,i,o,a,v out of 400 avail
.top - all chips taken
.wang - all chips taken
.xyz - all chips taken


..cannot guarantee 100% accuracy with current blood alcohol level sorry
 
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@stub - It was 6-0-0.com (just checked and the page it points to has now changed from when I first checked on it a couple of days after the auction). The price was low (bottom $200+), the bidder and I were the only bidders for the domain and in the auction. I was bidding against their earlier placed bid and was using the extended 5 minute periods to up my bid. I had to take a call and missed getting in subsequent bids.

Anyway those are the details, unfortunately not a $x,xxx kind of bidding but still one to note.

That's encouraging at least. Low $200 for a non-random number. Any idea what random numbers go for?
 
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