How much would or have you pay for a domain name?
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When I set up my initial site, maybe 10 years ago (shudder) I bought BowlerHatSolutions.co.uk - the solutions means absolutely nothing, nothing, it's just a tired, horrid cliché in the same vein as every design shop using SomethingCreative.com so when we got the chance to go after www.BowlerHat.co.uk we wanted it, we wanted it bad.
So, I set a price in my head, and haggled with the domain owner for nearly a year and eventually, he came around to my way of thinking. It was a good deal more than £200 but was very valuable to me and to my brand - for a UK based SEO and Web Design the Bowler Hat icon is a really strong identity so... Well, I wanted it and eventually got it.
What are your other options?
www.I-wanted-whitby-jet-but-this-was-all-that-was-left.com?

Marcus
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In addition to the value of the relevancy of the domain name to the business, which - I agree - is a value that the individual business owner must evaluate and decide, there are two other tremendous key points in having a domain name which either matches or is highly-relevant to the primary business function.
First is the SEO value. All other factors being even (domain age, quality of landing page content, backlinks, etc. etc.) - a highly relevant domain name will almost always achieve better organic ranking vs. a similar competitor site with a less or non-relevant domain name.
Second - and this can make a tremendous difference economically over time - is the SEM / PPC value of a relevant domain name including your top keyword / key phrase will, all other factors being even, cost you less to advertise on a PPC-basis than a non-relevant domain name. So if you're in a market where your price per click is several dollars or higher - a non-relevant domain name can cost dollars (pounds) per click more than a relevant one. This can make a difference of tens to hundreds of thousands of increased ad budget cost over time, depending upon overall ad spend.
So while several thousand dollars / pounds for a domain name seems expensive, it's a cost that can likely be quickly amortized if it's for a commerce-based website which has a decent annual revenue, especially when you factor in paid search as well as organic.
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Great to hear that you are going to be "The Man" for Whitby Jet.
Owning this domain will give you immediate credibility. From my experience, this type of domain can have a much better conversion rate and fetch higher prices than selling the same product on a jewelry site.
If I was going into this business I would have paid $X000 - maybe more for this domain.
It is a one time cost.
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Oh Marcus! I have missed reading your responses in Q&A.
www.I-wanted-whitby-jet-but-this-was-all-that-was-left.com
Really made my morning! Thanks!
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That is really funny.
SEOMoz needs a 10x button for thumbs up. I am going to spam Rands email until they give us one. They should also have a 100x thumbs up that a member can only use once per year. I would have used it today..
Thank you, Marcus.
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Seriously.... too many people see that a domain is registered and don't track down the owner to make an offer or ask what he wants for it. Anybody who registers www.I-wanted-whitby-jet-but-this-was-all-that-was-left.com without getting in touch with the owner of whitbyjet.com needs a kick in the pants.
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Ha, well, I am back.

Been busy, busy, busy, but nothing works for letting off a bit of SEO steam like the Moz Q&A!
Oh, and I really want that Roger T-Shirt!
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Ha, for sure! Good domains are like gold dust in some instances and I would pay 5x what they are asking.
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Marcus I don't want to be picky but if I decide to go with your suggestion could I have to domain name without the hyphens?www.Iwantedwhitbyjetbutthiswasallthatasleft.com might not be as readable but it would be better for my SEO wouldn't it?Anywhere nice little story and I'm glad you got the domain name you wanted eventually, I bet they thought it was going to be a bowler hat retailer the eventually slapped the cash down

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I have done, it's actually now functioning the domain is live and there will be a website there later this week thanks for the encouragement
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That's what I find slightly hard to understand, there are a reasonable number of
online retailers with good levels of stock, like this one which has a bricks
and mortar shop in a prime location in town where they pay around £1000 a month just for the rent, this is their website http://www.whitbyjetjewellery.net/ So why don't they jump at the chance of getting the exact match domain? Do you think it's purely down to lack of knowledge by their SEO person! I realise some of them won’t actually invested much in their online marketing but surely some of them have. Easier to understand if the domain retailer had beenasking $5,000 for the domain, but like you pointed out at $300 it was peanuts. -
I didn't know about the pay per click relevance of having the exact domain name match to the product being sold but I can see how that could be very important if you are heavily into Google ad words, but for a smaller company it wont be of great benefit becouse I'm not intending of spending much in that direction, but thanks for the information.
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You should probably point out-- facebook did NOT pay 100 million just for face.com-- facebook has been using face.com's facial recognition software for ages. They purchased the entire company for 100mm.
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Good point! You caught me scanning the headlines.
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$550k and google is not treating it well at all...damn.
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Years ago I paid $1500 for keyword rich, two-word.com and it has worked out really well.
However, if I had it to do over again I wouldn't. Now I think a unique, brandable domain name with one of the keywords in it for $10 is a better choice.
example:
2-word keyphrase: abcde-efghij.com
unique/brandable: abcdeworld.comRegards,
Sam -
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