Interesting read whether you agree with him or not
http://www.seobook.com/category-killer-domain-names
http://www.seobook.com/category-killer-domain-names
It's an interesting read, but I agree with the above comments, and it reads more like a case against the value of organic search in general.
In addition, I'd hardly expect SEOs to be publicly promoting exact match domains anyway given what their business actually is and who they make their money off, a bit like the old one about not expecting a turkey to vote for Christmas.
Articles on there are always linkbait x is dead etc.
Seomoz is now a multi million dollar vc backed company with products to sell.
Ty, I agree with you I think it also reads like a case against organic seo. Which is interesting given it is a seo writing it.
Rob - Aaron is seobook not seomoz
SEO is only part of the story
Aaron, you're missing the big picture here. Most companies of any real size will be doing paid advertising in tandem with their SEO efforts. And that's an area where exact-match domains have played and will continue to play a key role, since the right exact-match domain will generate a higher CTR (and correspondingly more traffic/a lower CPC) than "branded" alternatives, assuming we're not talking about a case where there's a clear "household name" company in the mix.
I covered this in my case study, where I pitted "electric bicycles" against 2 branded alternatives, and managed to generate a near-doubling of CTR for the same ads, bids, keywords, etc. In other words, the ONLY difference was the domain name. http://www.memorabledomains.co.uk/ppc-generic-domains.html
This is down to the fact that Google will bold the URL if it is an exact match to the search in question, so you've got one ad where the URL is lit up like a christmas tree and therefore stands out from the crowd. At the same time, there's a psychologically compelling "click" of recognition when people see and take note of the URL, since it matches their train of thought at the time they conducted that search.
Because the CTR improvements have literally nothing to do with Google's algorithm, they're not going to go away - if anything, the owners of exact-match domains are having a field day right now as Google is experimenting with adding the domain name at the end of the ad title, and also moving the URL up to be the second line of the ad (thus bringing the highlighted text into even more prominence).
So any company spending a reasonable amount on PPC should sit down and do a bit of math, and see what this kind of CTR improvement might mean to their ad budget, sales, ROI and bottom line.
And that's before we even start to consider the roughly 90% of advertising that takes place offline, where an exact match domain can really help because it makes the URL to be visited (when such a call to action is desired) much, much easier to remember. Instead of forcing somebody who is being bombarded with marketing messages and who has an extremely limited attention span to 1) learn what your company does and 2) remember a contrived URL, they instead only have to remember a URL that fits into their existing thought pattern. A frictionless process, that again will pay huge dividends in terms of ROI.
Beyond that, there's also the "credibility boost" which, while unquantifiable, is nevertheless very real. If you're competing against 100 other companies to sell a particular product/service, the fact that you have THE domain name that EXACTLY describes that product/service helps to make you look like the leading player in the market rather than just another also-ran.
So even if there was literally ZERO SEO benefit to be wrung out of an exact match domain (which will never be the case, since the credibility factor alone makes it easier to build links, for example) there is still massive value in securing the right domain name for companies savvy enough to look beyond the very narrow issue of Google's possible dialling-down of some nebulous "SEO boost" given to exact match domains.
Oh, and then there's Bing - but I think I've made my point!
One more thought...
Sorry, forgot to add: the more Google makes it hard for companies to get traffic organically, the more important it becomes for them to seek out an edge - any edge - in the paid PPC advertising race.
So as Google clutters the results with maps, photos, images, in-house results from group companies, places, etc. etc. merchants are going to HAVE to turn to PPC to replace the lost traffic (Google's plan all along, of course - it's as clear as daylight) and the one un-replicable edge they can secure for themselves is the exact-match domain for their main keyphrase, since all other aspects of the PPC process (keywords being bid on, landing pages, ads, budgets, bids etc.) can be replicated by competitors, but the exact match bonus - the one Google really CAN'T take away - will accrue to them and them alone.
I believe brands are what people remember most int he end and except for a handful e.g. your diy.com's etc most companies are happy with their company/brand name, and judging by the way g's going theres no point in them investing in a keyword domain to try and seo it when you need to bang it on adwords to get a click anyway..?
Think "niche dominance".
I'm old fashioned here and I'm not even going to talk about adwords/seo or anything about driving traffic, but the value of an effective brand.
A descriptive domain such as carrentals.co.uk, signals a number of things:
Quality that is easily discernible. They do what they say they do. So if I am looking for a wood floor, then buying from a domain including woodflooring gives me confidence that this is the companies focus rather than just a sideline and that ultimately for me (the consumer) by spending time and money on this brand they have confidence in their offering.
Not every business can afford to build up a household name such as Amazon or ebay, and hence they require a product descriptive domain. One might as well as go for a descriptive domain if the business is selling a particular product where the brand is less important. In the above example I'm fairly agnostic about the manufacturer of the wood floor and I certainly don't expect to be buying wood floors every five minutes. But knowing the company has been competitive a got a competitive domain signals "seriousness" to me.
There is another perhaps more subtle signal. Consumers are aware of URL's even in the case where browsers are attempting to reduce their influence. When making purchases, consumers like to check their money is not going to a phishing site or a spam site and this is where a decent domain comes in handy. Again at this stage anything that can help consumers be confident in the company offering such as a domain that resonates with the underlying offering helps. Got to ask why a fly-by-nite company would use a decent competitive domain such as cars.co.uk?
Lets face it, receiving email from [email protected] gives much more credence than a) fictional brand i.e. abcd.com or b) carrentals-uk.ltd.uk for the simple fact it signals longevity in the market place. CarRentals would have been an early domain to be snapped up, so the company in charge: was either an early adopter of new technology or had the cash to spend on purchasing the name because they were serious about the business. You might be thinking that consumers don't even think about this kind of thing, but I say you are wrong to treat them so - consumers see the value of smart brands and advertising everywhere.
In summary I think there will always be a market for descriptive, memorable and brandable domains because it does have an impact on businesses in a variety of ways that go beyond just the case of getting 'footfall'.
Some of my best sales have been to companies looking to make an entry into an overcrowded market and having that descriptive product based domain vertical ensure that the prospective customer believes that they have the longevity in that market. Some of my buyers have been multi-billion dollar organisations who understand the value of good old fashioned simplicity and branding.
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