- Impact
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sa-rah.com
Registry - Name.com
Creation date - 2006-08-15
Expiry date - 2016-08-15
Age - 9 years old
sarah.com is valued at $ 311,000
Average Monthly Search Stats - Exact Match - [sarah]
Monthly Searches: 135,300
Cost Per Click: $0.51 USD
Source - Estibot.com
Why this name is a good investment is due to the fact that Sarah is a very popular name in Europe, North America and the Middle East.
"Frequently, the name refers to Sarah, the wife of Abraham in the Hebrew Bible, the Christian Old Testament, and the Islamic Quran. In Arabic, Hebrew, and Persian, it means woman of high rank, often simply translated as "Princess". In Modern Hebrew, "sarah" is the word for "woman minister".
In the United States, Sarah has been counted among the top 150 given names since 1880, when name popularity statistics were first recorded in the United States. Sarah ranked among the top 10 names from 1978 to 2002, reaching a plateau of popularity from the early 1980s to 1988. Every year since and including 1989 it has fallen in popularity, but it remained the 30th most popular name for newborn girls in 2010.
The name has been similarly popular in Ireland and the United Kingdom. In England, it gained popularity after the Protestant Reformation. In 2014, Sarah ranked as the tenth most popular female baby name in Ireland." - Wikipedia
As for the hyphen and the question whether Google would recognize it as important as the non-hyphenated name let me quote from DN Journal:-
"However, that sentiment is not shared by buyers in one of the world's biggest domain markets - Germany. In fact, they seem to love hyphenated domains. One of the more interesting things I learned at the T.R.A.F.F.I.C. ccTLDs conference in Amsterdam this past June was that about half of all .de (Germany's country code) domain registrations are hyphenated!
So when news came from Sedo.com this week that they had sold Hotel-Reservation.com for an astounding €142,800 ($209,916) my very first thought was that the buyer had to be from Germany. That intitial reaction was confirmed when I looked up the new owner in the WhoIs record and found that it is Cologne, Germany businessman Robert Ragge who operates a company called Hotel Reservation Service (the owner of the non-hyphenated version of the name, which sold for just $27,500 in May 2004, also happens to be from Germany)."
The Myth of “Hyphen Dropoffs”
"Many people have reported that they are seeing drop-offs in rankings of their hyphenated domains in Google SERPs (Search Engine Results Pages). Upon further inspection, however, the drop-offs are also being realized by non-hyphenated domains. The bottom line is that Google is constantly updating their search algorithms, so your page rankings will vary day-to-day, and often pages will go up and down in ranking or (worst case) be dropped from the index. But this has nothing to do with hyphens. Just imagine the risk Google, or any search engine for that matter, would run if they penalized hyphenated domain names that ended up being high quality sites. A simple, crude filter such as this has nothing to do with distinguishing quality content – and the complex Google algorithms have been refined to a development point that is far beyond this." - WeRockYourWeb.com
I hope I have made a good case for you to consider the name I have listed above.
Please pm me for any offer.
Let's talk
Registry - Name.com
Creation date - 2006-08-15
Expiry date - 2016-08-15
Age - 9 years old
sarah.com is valued at $ 311,000
Average Monthly Search Stats - Exact Match - [sarah]
Monthly Searches: 135,300
Cost Per Click: $0.51 USD
Source - Estibot.com
Why this name is a good investment is due to the fact that Sarah is a very popular name in Europe, North America and the Middle East.
"Frequently, the name refers to Sarah, the wife of Abraham in the Hebrew Bible, the Christian Old Testament, and the Islamic Quran. In Arabic, Hebrew, and Persian, it means woman of high rank, often simply translated as "Princess". In Modern Hebrew, "sarah" is the word for "woman minister".
In the United States, Sarah has been counted among the top 150 given names since 1880, when name popularity statistics were first recorded in the United States. Sarah ranked among the top 10 names from 1978 to 2002, reaching a plateau of popularity from the early 1980s to 1988. Every year since and including 1989 it has fallen in popularity, but it remained the 30th most popular name for newborn girls in 2010.
The name has been similarly popular in Ireland and the United Kingdom. In England, it gained popularity after the Protestant Reformation. In 2014, Sarah ranked as the tenth most popular female baby name in Ireland." - Wikipedia
As for the hyphen and the question whether Google would recognize it as important as the non-hyphenated name let me quote from DN Journal:-
"However, that sentiment is not shared by buyers in one of the world's biggest domain markets - Germany. In fact, they seem to love hyphenated domains. One of the more interesting things I learned at the T.R.A.F.F.I.C. ccTLDs conference in Amsterdam this past June was that about half of all .de (Germany's country code) domain registrations are hyphenated!
So when news came from Sedo.com this week that they had sold Hotel-Reservation.com for an astounding €142,800 ($209,916) my very first thought was that the buyer had to be from Germany. That intitial reaction was confirmed when I looked up the new owner in the WhoIs record and found that it is Cologne, Germany businessman Robert Ragge who operates a company called Hotel Reservation Service (the owner of the non-hyphenated version of the name, which sold for just $27,500 in May 2004, also happens to be from Germany)."
The Myth of “Hyphen Dropoffs”
"Many people have reported that they are seeing drop-offs in rankings of their hyphenated domains in Google SERPs (Search Engine Results Pages). Upon further inspection, however, the drop-offs are also being realized by non-hyphenated domains. The bottom line is that Google is constantly updating their search algorithms, so your page rankings will vary day-to-day, and often pages will go up and down in ranking or (worst case) be dropped from the index. But this has nothing to do with hyphens. Just imagine the risk Google, or any search engine for that matter, would run if they penalized hyphenated domain names that ended up being high quality sites. A simple, crude filter such as this has nothing to do with distinguishing quality content – and the complex Google algorithms have been refined to a development point that is far beyond this." - WeRockYourWeb.com
I hope I have made a good case for you to consider the name I have listed above.
Please pm me for any offer.
Let's talk





