Do you do Dashes in Domain Names?

30 replies
What do you think is better? A domain name with a dash or a name made up of 3 words and no dash?
#dashes #domain #names
  • Profile picture of the author showbizvet
    I will always try to go for NO dash if possible, but of course that's not always possible. If not, then you could consider adding a qualify keyword. i.e. weightloss.com is probably (I'd bet on it) taken, but you might find.. easyweightloss quickweightloss fastweightloss bestweightloss or something similar. If even then I can't find what I'm looking for, I'll add a dash.
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    • Profile picture of the author Dena Gottlieb
      I want to put up a site to SELL a product (not an information product).
      Would you choose "acme-cars.com" or "buyacmecars" or "theacmecars.com"
      Thanks
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      Dena
      TerraCureProducts.com

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  • Profile picture of the author MikeWest
    I saw that dashes are more popular in europe (like for personal domains first-lastname.com)
    Whereas in the US its a no dash rule Everyone takes firstlastname.com

    So for the US market i'd go with no dash at all if possible.
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    • Profile picture of the author SandyDuPlessis
      Dena,

      Site Build It recommends and encourages dashes. Others recommend no dashes. I think it is very much up to you. If the site name you want is taken without dashes, then you go get it with the dashes in.

      As to your other questions, I would go for buyacmecars. People who come to the site know from the beginning that it is a sales site so that means you are getting targeted customers who want to buy, if not immediately, then a little later.

      That is just my opinion, others may think differently.

      Sandy
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      • Profile picture of the author Ellen Violette
        It's just easier to find domain names with no dashes. You have to get inside your buyers mind. If they heard the name of your product would they know there was a dash in the url just from hearing it? No. So unless they saw it written down, they probably wouldn't be able to find it. That's why no dashes are better. Having said that I do have one product out of many that has a dash because the other was taken but if I were doing it today, I would have found another name-or added another descriptive word to it as was mentioned in one of the comments.
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    • Profile picture of the author TelegramSam
      Originally Posted by MikeWest View Post

      I saw that dashes are more popular in europe (like for personal domains first-lastname.com)

      This is totally incorrect.
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  • Profile picture of the author inovica
    I think it depends on how the domain name reads - sometimes it can be hard to tell what the domain says if the words used are hard to separate out. That might sound a little dumb, but it happens! Or if the first word ends with the same letter that the next word begins with the domain won't look that great. 'toniccompany' 'treeeater' -- just making stuff up now, but for me it's a question of how well the domain looks and reads as to whether I add a dash.
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    • Profile picture of the author um1001
      Never.

      If my keyword phrase is:

      Best Party Pontoon Boat Chairs

      I am always going to use either:

      bestpartypontoonboatchairs.com
      bestpartypontoonboatchairs.net
      bestpartypontoonboatchairs.org

      If I can't find one of those, I move on to an easier target.
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      -- Jack Morrison / um1001

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  • Profile picture of the author ChrisDouthit
    I use to do dashes in domains, a while back it was much easier for the search engines to pick up the second and third words. However, today thats not the case. I dont ever to dashes anymore. Mainly because if someone is trying to type my domain name in from memory they will likely forget the dashing and instead go to my competitors site.
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  • Profile picture of the author TheRichJerksNet
    I stay away from dashes.. If you purpose is for SEO then those dashes do not matter as they are ignored so you might as well register mykeyword.com vs mykeyword-mykeyword.com. Not to mention the fact a domain is way easier to remember without dashes.

    The more complex you make it the harder it is going to be to create a true success out of the site you are trying to put together..

    James
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    • Profile picture of the author turbostar52
      For SEO, it's usually better to get domain names with no more than three words without hyphens; but with more three words, you should go with names containing hyphens.
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  • Profile picture of the author the_master
    If your domain name is your primary keyword and Google your main source of traffic, you're better off without dashes. I have noticed on several of my niche sites that the ones without dashes are easier picked up by Google. It might be just my case, but i have observed this in multiple cases.
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    • Profile picture of the author Gene Pimentel
      Originally Posted by the_master View Post

      If your domain name is your primary keyword and Google your main source of traffic, you're better off without dashes. I have noticed on several of my niche sites that the ones without dashes are easier picked up by Google. It might be just my case, but i have observed this in multiple cases.
      Not just you. This has been my observation as well. I believe Google's algorithm now gives less importance to dashed domains because more often than not, dashed domains are registered only because the more viable non-dashed version is already registered.
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      • Profile picture of the author Alexa Smith
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        • Profile picture of the author Gene Pimentel
          Originally Posted by Alexa Smith View Post

          You never quite know with Google, but for myself, I have absolutely no difficulty believing this is probably true. It intrinsically makes sense (not that that's always a reliable indicator!).
          Yeah, the only one who knows for sure is the individual who coded the algorithm... but even that may have been the work of an automated bot. The only thing we can rely on is our own observed results!
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          • Profile picture of the author mikeyman120
            I'm not sure how it started for me but for some reason all I ever bought was domains with a dash or dashes in it. Then I stopped and now I only do domains of a few words and no dashes. But I have about 15 sites out there with dashes.

            Mike
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          • Profile picture of the author gary15
            I've always heard 2 different sides of the story, some people say that having no dashes is better for ranking higher as the domain name is more SEO friendly, however I think that it won't make a huge difference.

            I somehow do prefer domains without dashes as they look more orginal, but I guess we'll never know as only Google knows.
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            • Profile picture of the author Killer Joe
              Matt Cutts from Google addressed this and said it's better to use dashes than running your words together in certain instances (I'm paraphrasing).

              He used the example of "experts exchange" which when tied together could be read as "expert sexchange" by Googles' bot.

              For SEO purposes, dashes sometimes are better as in the above example Matt used.

              I have a lot of domain names that use dashes. What I also will do if I can score the combined single domain name is to register the dashed domains as well. You can use them as redirects, and also eliminate confusion when others grab the hyphenated names for good keyphrases. You own them, you control how they get used.

              Your milage may vary...

              KJ
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          • Profile picture of the author EricThor
            I don't know of a single study, published by any university or government, that gives any weight to dashes in domain names - flip a coin and that answer is just as good as any other answer.

            The whole idea is to show Google (and this is all about Google) that the name of your website says more than any other page in your website. With billions of domain names in use why would Google care about dashes at all? (My guess).

            The problem is when your description, of your website, can't be in your domain name - what to do? E.g. your website is all about used cars. Well you can't use dashes unless you use one between each letter and Google isn't that smart.

            So I use sub-domain names and get ANY website name I want. www.usedcars.somethingInGeneral.com is how I'd tell Google exactly what my website is all about. I will get just as much "juice" from that name as WWW.UsedCars.com (my guess again).

            Additionally you can hang hundreds of websites off the core website www.somethingInGeneral.com and pay $7/year for all of them.

            All your other pages/posts, in your website, should be related to your domain name. Google should then have little doubt just what your website and every page/post is about.
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  • Profile picture of the author raylm123
    It depends on the purpose of my website. If it's for adsense where I just want to rank for keywords and get the click, I'll use dashes. If it's for a website where I want repeat visitors I go for the easy to remember domain name (i.e., no dashes).
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  • Profile picture of the author SPress
    I agree with the "no dash" contingent But it's just a personal opinion. In reality, I've never seen it affect rankings either way.

    But only for the domain name. For folder and page names, then I prefer/recommend the dashes.
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  • Profile picture of the author MemberWing
    MainMerchant.com sold a product whom i decided to become affiliate with.
    So i registered main-merchant.com and make it as affiliate redirect.
    In a few days I noticed more affiliate commissions than expected.
    What happened is main merchant marketing department put main-merchant.com domain (with my dash!) into their Google active adwords campaign.

    It didn't last long - but was it ever a joyful ride!

    Gleb
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  • Profile picture of the author BIG Mike
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    • Profile picture of the author Gene Pimentel
      Originally Posted by BIG Mike View Post

      Sorry Gene, but saying that Google gives less importance to a hyphen is like saying they give less importantance to the letter "R" - it just ain't so.
      No problem Mike, there is room for more than one point of view on this subject. That's why I tried to not state my observation as fact be saying "it was my observation", and "I believe..."

      Saying Google gives less importance to a dash than it does to the letter "R" makes perfect sense to me. The alphabet forms the keywords, dashes don't. Google gives much less importance to .INFO domains (and others) simply because they factor in the quality of the content found on the majority of INFO sites, as well as their longevity. I believe the same applies to hyphenated vs non-hyphenated. But that's my personal observation and not documented fact. It's all speculation unless we run a scientific test :-)

      From my own personal experience, non-hyphens are preferred over hyphenated in serps. It's important to factor in all the other variables of course, and there are so many of them.

      I agree, lots of hyphenated domains get great rankings and position. Many hyphenated domains outperform their non-hyphenated counterpart. But in my opinion, when Google has the choice of two domains with ALL else being equal, the non-hyphenated domain prevails.
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  • Profile picture of the author JohnMcCabe
    Dena, since you asked what I think, here goes...

    It depends.

    If you are choosing the domain name for the search engines, I don't think it matters much.

    If you are choosing the domain name to have people type it into the browser bar, go for the no-dash name.

    Better yet, buy both and redirect one to the other so you have both bases covered...
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  • Profile picture of the author jeffbarnes
    I use dashes in several of the domains I own. They seem to work well for me.
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  • Profile picture of the author Olga Schipilow
    Dena

    I agree with Sandy. But whatever suits you , take your pick.
    To your success!
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  • Profile picture of the author juniorich
    For search engines dash or no dash does not matter, but visitors prefer domains with no dash, it's easier to type. So, no dash is better for type-in traffic, for example if you decide to promote your site on youtube with watermark on your videos.
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  • Profile picture of the author sbucciarel
    Banned
    No dashes for me. I want domain names that have some resell value and having dashes reduces value of domains .... plus, I just don't like them.
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    • Profile picture of the author Dena Gottlieb
      Thanks for all the input.
      I'm going with "buyacmecars" I think.
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      Dena
      TerraCureProducts.com

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  • Profile picture of the author troy23
    Dashes are better as it seperates the keywords out. I have seen this in books about getting to the top of Google.
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    • Profile picture of the author Gene Pimentel
      Originally Posted by troy23 View Post

      Dashes are better as it seperates the keywords out. I have seen this in books about getting to the top of Google.
      Sorry, but this is not the case. Outdated information.
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