Importance of having your own domain name
By Sumantra Roy
A question that I frequently hear is "Do I really
need to have my own domain name?" The one word answer is "YES.".
If you put up your site with some of the free web hosting services,
the only company who benefits is the web hosting company. The last person
who benefits is you. There are a number of reasons why having your own
domain name is a must:
1) When you have your own domain name, the address of
your web site will be of the form http://www.yoursite.com.
On the other hand, if you put up your site on one of the free servers,
the address of your web site will be something like
http://www.somefreewebsite.com/yoursite/. Which of these two
sounds more professional? Which of these two is smaller and is hence
easier to remember? I leave you to make the judgement.
2) The only way to make money online is to build up credibility
among your customers. Having your own domain name is the first step
in doing that. Your customers will feel more comfortable buying whatever
it is that you are selling if you have your own domain name. It makes
your customers feel that they are dealing with a large, established
company, rather than with some fly by night operator.
3) When you have your domain name, you can have multiple
email aliases of the form alias@yoursite.com.
This allows you to assign different email aliases to different functions,
all of them pointing to your actual email address. Hence, for example,
for questions related to the products and services that you sell, you
can have an email address like sales@yoursite.com.
For questions related to the newsletter that you publish, you can have
an email address like editor@yoursite.com.
For comments/suggestions about your web site, you can direct your customers
to feedback@yoursite.com or webmaster@yoursite.com.
Having different email addresses for different functions not only makes
it easier for you to filter your email using your email client program
(Eudora Pro, Pegasus Mail, Outlook Express etc.), but also gives your
customers the impression that yours is a large, established company
with whom it is safe to do business.
4) Many search engines give a lot of emphasis to the home
page of a particular domain, i.e. other things remaining the same, a
home page of a domain will often rank higher for a particular keyword
than any other page. When you use some of the free hosting services,
your index.html page is the home page of your site, but not of that
domain. Hence in these search engines, your site will find it very difficult
to make it to the top 20 or top 30, let alone the top 10 for some of
the really competitive keywords. Just think of the amount of traffic
that you will lose if this happens.
5) Some search engines are now refusing to spider the
web sites which are hosted by the free web hosts. For instance, if you
have a site hosted by the free web hosts, you would, until recently,
have got the infamous error message saying that too many pages have
been submitted from your site if you tried to submit your site to AltaVista.
While AltaVista now says that
"your URL has been submitted for processing" if you try to
submit your site, rest assured that it will not spider any site belonging
to many of the free web hosts even though it says that your site has
been accepted. Can you afford that?
6) When your site is hosted by some of the free web hosts,
you will find it very difficult to get it listed in a major directory
like Yahoo!. Although Yahoo!
will never admit that it won't add a commercial site which is being
hosted in one of the free web hosts, in practice, it will be a miracle
if you can get your site listed by Yahoo!!.
Listing your site with Yahoo! is
difficult enough even when you have your own domain. Don't make your
task more difficult than what it needs to be.
If you do not currently have a domain name, are you convinced
that you need one right now? The small fee that you pay per year for
your own domain name is peanuts compared to the benefits that you get.
You can check out the availability of domain names and register new
domains here.