karlvolmer
New member
- Registriert
- 11. Juli 2008
- Beiträge
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Bindestrich-Domains (abgetrennt von "Kaufe Spitzen .com Domains für bis zu 10.000")
Hallo Herr Schubert,
im Consultdomain-Forum las ich in Ihrem 1. Beitrag “Keine Bindestriche” und in Ihrem bislang letzten Posting “In den USA sind Bindestrichdomains so gut wie unverwertbar”.
Auf meiner vor etwa 5 Jahren kreierten Webseite http://www.special-specials.com/websiteforsale.htm finden Sie als Appendix unter der Überschrift “Myth & Reality” meine durch Experten unterstützte Argumentation für Bindestrich-Domains. Die Zeiten und damit auch die Search Engine Algorithmen haben sich inzwischen natürlich verändert. Ich habe deshalb heute aufgrund Ihrer konträren Auffassung die von mir seinerzeit zitierten Experten-Meinungen auf ihre Aktualität überprüft und nahezu unverändert vorgefunden.
Ich wäre Ihnen nun sehr dankbar, wenn Sie mir freundlicherweise Ihre hiervon abweichende Einschätzung und/oder Erfahrung darzulegen würden.
Besten Dank im Voraus für Ihre geschätzte Stellungnahme.
Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Karl H. Volmer
Nelkenweg 7
26160 Bad Zwischenahn
[email protected]
_____________________________________________
Hier nun der kopierte Text der o.a. Webseite:
Myth & Reality
Myth: The value of one word URLs is always higher than the marketability of hyphen-combined two-word URLs.
Reality: It's just opposite out of several reasons:
Search Engines "read" the hyphen as a space. When indexing a name like "best-source-for-specialties", many search engines will see "best," "source" "for" and "specialties" as separate words because of the hyphens. They will count the keywords 1."best," 2."source" and 3."specialties" (neglecting "for").
"BestSourceForSpecialties" (without hyphens) will only index for the first keyword "best" despite of the capitalization. - While the search engines only score the one word, all other things being equal, the hyphenated domain name will get the much higher positions. Higher Position = Higher Traffic. You can easily put your hyphenated domain name to work building or extending your web site traffic. A hyphenated domain name will help you climb to the top!
The major search engines like Yahoo, AltaVista, AllTheWeb, Google and MSNSearch love domains that contain the searched for words in them, especially when they are separated by a hyphen, and give a large boost in ranking to those websites. (They will only boost sites containing the search terms in your domain, so you can't just register a domain name and expect to get tons of traffic from it, if the actual website is about a completely different subject.)
Hyphenated names have advantages:
- they broaden your choice. For example, fishinglures.com may be taken but fishing-lures.com may still be available.
- they are easier on the eyes: for example, life-with-art.com is clear. lifewithart.com could appear to be Life With Hart.
- makes the keywords clear to search engines because the words are separated.
Read here, what experts have to say:
WebmasterWorld.com: "Selecting the right keywords for your domain name can pay big rewards in giving you "the edge" over your competition. Hyphenate the words unless you're going to be using the name for offline promotion as well. In that case it's a good idea to get both the hyphenated and non-hyphenated domains. Don't forget you can also use keywords as subdomains if you want to use your company name as the domain name as well. - A short, descriptive, keyword rich title, including the header graphic will ensure a much better chance of success in search engine results."
Active-Domain.com: "Search engines tend to like words that are separated by dashes (little known secret!)."
Dr. Ralph F. Wilson, E-business Consultant: "It's probably safer for doorway pages to use long hyphenated domain names that include the keywords you are optimizing for."
david-carter.com/domain-name-valuations.htm (~Domain Name Valuations and Appraisals~):
"Not everyone is a fan of hyphenated names, but almost without exception, search engines are very big fans. I know,
I have over 50 names achieving top ten positioning on major search engines against a variety of search terms. That provides me with hundreds of top placed positions! I explain how I do that on my Search Engine Tips page - you can see that by clicking right here."
Submerged Ideas, Inc.: (Charts)
"... names with general applicability (G) are twice as valuable as names relating to special interests"
"... there is very little difference in median sales price between hyphenated and non-hyphenated names"
"... there is very little distinction between one-word and non one-word domain names in the median price range"
"... general domain names, once again, represent the dominant category."
"Domain Wizardry" By Jim Daniels:
"... contrary to popular belief, the hyphen (-) can actually be a GOOD component in a domain name."
Netkwake.com:
" ... some people may try to convince you that hyphenated domain names do not work. That is complete rubbish and we can prove it. A domain hyphenated into individual words can give many opportunities marketing wise."
:flute:
In den USA sind Bindestrichdomains so gut wie unverwertbar.
Ich suche english.com, ohne Bindestrich.
Nochmal: Bitte per PM anbieten, sonst ächzt das gesamte Forum, weil jeder war hier auf dem Thread schonmal drauf, und wird somit zwangs-angepingt.
Hallo Herr Schubert,
im Consultdomain-Forum las ich in Ihrem 1. Beitrag “Keine Bindestriche” und in Ihrem bislang letzten Posting “In den USA sind Bindestrichdomains so gut wie unverwertbar”.
Auf meiner vor etwa 5 Jahren kreierten Webseite http://www.special-specials.com/websiteforsale.htm finden Sie als Appendix unter der Überschrift “Myth & Reality” meine durch Experten unterstützte Argumentation für Bindestrich-Domains. Die Zeiten und damit auch die Search Engine Algorithmen haben sich inzwischen natürlich verändert. Ich habe deshalb heute aufgrund Ihrer konträren Auffassung die von mir seinerzeit zitierten Experten-Meinungen auf ihre Aktualität überprüft und nahezu unverändert vorgefunden.
Ich wäre Ihnen nun sehr dankbar, wenn Sie mir freundlicherweise Ihre hiervon abweichende Einschätzung und/oder Erfahrung darzulegen würden.
Besten Dank im Voraus für Ihre geschätzte Stellungnahme.
Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Karl H. Volmer
Nelkenweg 7
26160 Bad Zwischenahn
[email protected]
_____________________________________________
Hier nun der kopierte Text der o.a. Webseite:
Myth & Reality
Myth: The value of one word URLs is always higher than the marketability of hyphen-combined two-word URLs.
Reality: It's just opposite out of several reasons:
Search Engines "read" the hyphen as a space. When indexing a name like "best-source-for-specialties", many search engines will see "best," "source" "for" and "specialties" as separate words because of the hyphens. They will count the keywords 1."best," 2."source" and 3."specialties" (neglecting "for").
"BestSourceForSpecialties" (without hyphens) will only index for the first keyword "best" despite of the capitalization. - While the search engines only score the one word, all other things being equal, the hyphenated domain name will get the much higher positions. Higher Position = Higher Traffic. You can easily put your hyphenated domain name to work building or extending your web site traffic. A hyphenated domain name will help you climb to the top!
The major search engines like Yahoo, AltaVista, AllTheWeb, Google and MSNSearch love domains that contain the searched for words in them, especially when they are separated by a hyphen, and give a large boost in ranking to those websites. (They will only boost sites containing the search terms in your domain, so you can't just register a domain name and expect to get tons of traffic from it, if the actual website is about a completely different subject.)
Hyphenated names have advantages:
- they broaden your choice. For example, fishinglures.com may be taken but fishing-lures.com may still be available.
- they are easier on the eyes: for example, life-with-art.com is clear. lifewithart.com could appear to be Life With Hart.
- makes the keywords clear to search engines because the words are separated.
Read here, what experts have to say:
WebmasterWorld.com: "Selecting the right keywords for your domain name can pay big rewards in giving you "the edge" over your competition. Hyphenate the words unless you're going to be using the name for offline promotion as well. In that case it's a good idea to get both the hyphenated and non-hyphenated domains. Don't forget you can also use keywords as subdomains if you want to use your company name as the domain name as well. - A short, descriptive, keyword rich title, including the header graphic will ensure a much better chance of success in search engine results."
Active-Domain.com: "Search engines tend to like words that are separated by dashes (little known secret!)."
Dr. Ralph F. Wilson, E-business Consultant: "It's probably safer for doorway pages to use long hyphenated domain names that include the keywords you are optimizing for."
david-carter.com/domain-name-valuations.htm (~Domain Name Valuations and Appraisals~):
"Not everyone is a fan of hyphenated names, but almost without exception, search engines are very big fans. I know,
I have over 50 names achieving top ten positioning on major search engines against a variety of search terms. That provides me with hundreds of top placed positions! I explain how I do that on my Search Engine Tips page - you can see that by clicking right here."
Submerged Ideas, Inc.: (Charts)
"... names with general applicability (G) are twice as valuable as names relating to special interests"
"... there is very little difference in median sales price between hyphenated and non-hyphenated names"
"... there is very little distinction between one-word and non one-word domain names in the median price range"
"... general domain names, once again, represent the dominant category."
"Domain Wizardry" By Jim Daniels:
"... contrary to popular belief, the hyphen (-) can actually be a GOOD component in a domain name."
Netkwake.com:
" ... some people may try to convince you that hyphenated domain names do not work. That is complete rubbish and we can prove it. A domain hyphenated into individual words can give many opportunities marketing wise."