Does it really matter, what you call your website? Here are some domains posted about using for a new site please take a look. Build your website, build your own website
Looks good. You have personalized it with your name directly in there. Adds a level of authenticity.
Once you get started you may need one-more-cup-of-coffee. :-) To get through the late nights when your trying to get somethings finished. :-)
Hey Steve, well timed. I just finished a piece on DNS.
http://mybizfreestuff.com/how-do-you-buy-a-domain-name
Doesn't directly matter but it does help with SEO. Jay mentions it in the SEO training.
Hopefullly it will give a bit more info.
Oh by the way just a quick side note, I wanted the domain name. One more cup of coffee. But somebody's using?
Hey Steve. Have you tried other variations of the domain you want? Such as anothercupofcoffe.com
thank you for your input, but I was thinking the same thing. It just can't make that much difference :-)
My personal experience has led me to conclude that you will have a hard time driving traffic if you fail to include niche related keywords in your domain name.
That's good to know, that will definitely keep that in mind. Thank you for your comment :-)
Hi. I was worried about the domain name too. The training says choose a domain that results in a google search tracking between 50-400. Well my husband and I chose one that resulted in one million when we used the WA software to track it. My husband thinks that we can make up for it by using more keywords in the content so that we can have better ranking with google. What do you think?
That will help, as long as you don't do keyword loading, which Google will recognize. Let the keywords fall naturally and you should be OK.
The example Loes gave, Nathaniell's domain name, does not contain any keyword and yet I believe it is successful one. Jovo
I think a domain-name should be related to the content within the domain, and it should be short and easy to remember. This is not rules, just my opinion :-)
First there are no domains listed here.
The domain name does not matter.
The content is the important element.
My husband and I chose a domain name that came back at one million when we entered it into the google ranking software provided by WA. We think we can improve the google rankings by having good keywords in our content
See more comments
Good evening wa, I have a question about domain names?
Does it really matter, what you call your website? Here are some domains posted about using for a new site please take a look. Build your website, build your own website
Using Jaaxy to analyse the keywords. Then choose keyword with good result to set as site title will bring you many traffics.
Looks good. You have personalized it with your name directly in there. Adds a level of authenticity.
Once you get started you may need one-more-cup-of-coffee. :-) To get through the late nights when your trying to get somethings finished. :-)
Hey Steve, well timed. I just finished a piece on DNS.
http://mybizfreestuff.com/how-do-you-buy-a-domain-name
Doesn't directly matter but it does help with SEO. Jay mentions it in the SEO training.
Hopefullly it will give a bit more info.
Oh by the way just a quick side note, I wanted the domain name. One more cup of coffee. But somebody's using?
Hey Steve. Have you tried other variations of the domain you want? Such as anothercupofcoffe.com
thank you for your input, but I was thinking the same thing. It just can't make that much difference :-)
My personal experience has led me to conclude that you will have a hard time driving traffic if you fail to include niche related keywords in your domain name.
That's good to know, that will definitely keep that in mind. Thank you for your comment :-)
Hi. I was worried about the domain name too. The training says choose a domain that results in a google search tracking between 50-400. Well my husband and I chose one that resulted in one million when we used the WA software to track it. My husband thinks that we can make up for it by using more keywords in the content so that we can have better ranking with google. What do you think?
That will help, as long as you don't do keyword loading, which Google will recognize. Let the keywords fall naturally and you should be OK.
The example Loes gave, Nathaniell's domain name, does not contain any keyword and yet I believe it is successful one. Jovo
I think a domain-name should be related to the content within the domain, and it should be short and easy to remember. This is not rules, just my opinion :-)
First there are no domains listed here.
The domain name does not matter.
The content is the important element.
My husband and I chose a domain name that came back at one million when we entered it into the google ranking software provided by WA. We think we can improve the google rankings by having good keywords in our content
See more comments
Is it bad manners to ask someone what theme they are using? Please let me know what everybody thinks. Steve
I would not consider it bad manners to ask about my theme. If I don't want to disclose something then I would say so. My policy is, "it never hurts to ask." ... GrampaMike
No of course not that's what we are here for I have a piece of software in my browser that can find that out anyway
Barry
Nope. Just ask or you can visit websites, scroll down and in mostly cases you will see name of theme. All the best.
You can normally see the theme someone is using by scrolling to the bottom of there site and it will be shown there is small print
I think it usually says at the bottom of the website what the wordpress theme is. I don't think it's a problem to ask people though.
No need for such a dilemma, here are sites which you can use to check the theme:
http://whatwpthemeisthat.com/
http://www.wpthemedetector.com/
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Is it a faux pas or bad manners?
Is it bad manners to ask someone what theme they are using? Please let me know what everybody thinks. Steve
I would not consider it bad manners to ask about my theme. If I don't want to disclose something then I would say so. My policy is, "it never hurts to ask." ... GrampaMike
No of course not that's what we are here for I have a piece of software in my browser that can find that out anyway
Barry
Nope. Just ask or you can visit websites, scroll down and in mostly cases you will see name of theme. All the best.
You can normally see the theme someone is using by scrolling to the bottom of there site and it will be shown there is small print
I think it usually says at the bottom of the website what the wordpress theme is. I don't think it's a problem to ask people though.
No need for such a dilemma, here are sites which you can use to check the theme:
http://whatwpthemeisthat.com/
http://www.wpthemedetector.com/
See more comments
I was reading an article about Seo, and they quote Matt Cutts of Google as saying, that the longer you pay your domain plays a factor inside trusts. Like if a site pays for one
I just want to thank everyone for their comments, we have established that it's a metric that Google uses. But a small one, but if a niche is competitive, that little metric might be the difference between position one, and positioned two?
You gain only site trust by owning the site for a longer period of time, and it doesnot matter whether you pay yearly or for three years, it's about how long your site is running. When your site is more then 6 months old, your site trust is increasing.
It's been well established as fact. Just the same, I always pay a year at a time. At my age, you don't make any long range plans.
probably true, but at the cost of domains I can't see that it would really make a difference
I have a question about site trust?
I was reading an article about Seo, and they quote Matt Cutts of Google as saying, that the longer you pay your domain plays a factor inside trusts. Like if a site pays for one
I just want to thank everyone for their comments, we have established that it's a metric that Google uses. But a small one, but if a niche is competitive, that little metric might be the difference between position one, and positioned two?
You gain only site trust by owning the site for a longer period of time, and it doesnot matter whether you pay yearly or for three years, it's about how long your site is running. When your site is more then 6 months old, your site trust is increasing.
It's been well established as fact. Just the same, I always pay a year at a time. At my age, you don't make any long range plans.
probably true, but at the cost of domains I can't see that it would really make a difference
Using Jaaxy to analyse the keywords. Then choose keyword with good result to set as site title will bring you many traffics.
Thank you!