- Impact
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This afternoon my wife dragged me to the Parade of Homes which is an annual event where builders show off their latest and greatest houses. These are homes priced at three to four times the median home price in the area. All the builders, contractors, Realtors, and subs leave their cards out in hopes visitors will want to contact them.
I started collecting cards for the humor of the domain name awareness.
The stucco guy has a cheap card, has the dot net of his company name for email, but the domain itself is just an ad for getting your own website and has nothing to do with his business. The dot com is a parked page that serves popunders.
The granite guy has a nice three color card and shows a 17 character long dot com domain. However, he uses a Yahoo email address. The website is lovely, but since it is all done in flash, not likely to rank well on search.
The builder has a three color card on VERY stiff and fancy stock but has no email address or website. He does include his fax number
The wall texturing guy has a REALLY expensive, full bleed, heavy stock, printed on both sides card and includes his aol.com email address.
Finally, some of the floor tiles are made by a company called Dreamweaver. As you might imagine, they had a little trouble finding any form of that available, and had to settle for the hyphenated dot biz.
From where I sit it seems obvious that almost everyone who visits these homes and picks up a card would probably look over a portfolio site that displayed completed work. I think they could generate leads if they offered to let prospective customers visit sites which are in process.
This is a small sample, but I think some conclusions can be reached.
Someone who is using an aol.com email account is probably not going to shell out big bucks for a domain until their awareness of the value of a good website increases.
Local advertising is where the leads for these companies will come from so search engine placement isn't especially important. An easy to spell name would be good, but if someone has picked up your card or is holding your newspaper ad in their hand, it's probably not essential.
In terms of how a "Good" domain is defined on NamePros, every one of these businesses is a potential future purchaser of a quality domain.
Some posters worry that the best opportunities are in the past, but it looks to me like the demand for good domains still has a lot of growth left in it.
I started collecting cards for the humor of the domain name awareness.
The stucco guy has a cheap card, has the dot net of his company name for email, but the domain itself is just an ad for getting your own website and has nothing to do with his business. The dot com is a parked page that serves popunders.
The granite guy has a nice three color card and shows a 17 character long dot com domain. However, he uses a Yahoo email address. The website is lovely, but since it is all done in flash, not likely to rank well on search.
The builder has a three color card on VERY stiff and fancy stock but has no email address or website. He does include his fax number
The wall texturing guy has a REALLY expensive, full bleed, heavy stock, printed on both sides card and includes his aol.com email address.
Finally, some of the floor tiles are made by a company called Dreamweaver. As you might imagine, they had a little trouble finding any form of that available, and had to settle for the hyphenated dot biz.
From where I sit it seems obvious that almost everyone who visits these homes and picks up a card would probably look over a portfolio site that displayed completed work. I think they could generate leads if they offered to let prospective customers visit sites which are in process.
This is a small sample, but I think some conclusions can be reached.
Someone who is using an aol.com email account is probably not going to shell out big bucks for a domain until their awareness of the value of a good website increases.
Local advertising is where the leads for these companies will come from so search engine placement isn't especially important. An easy to spell name would be good, but if someone has picked up your card or is holding your newspaper ad in their hand, it's probably not essential.
In terms of how a "Good" domain is defined on NamePros, every one of these businesses is a potential future purchaser of a quality domain.
Some posters worry that the best opportunities are in the past, but it looks to me like the demand for good domains still has a lot of growth left in it.
















