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keyword1keyword2.org better than keyword1-keyword2.org

Many people search keyword1 keyword2

         

uk_webber

10:21 am on Dec 20, 2004 (gmt 0)



I have the first option because I think it looks better and does not result in having to have the dash.

The more I think about it no one would ever do a search on keyword1keyword2 but only on keyword1 keyword2 so am I missing out here?

jatar_k

4:22 am on Dec 22, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member



I would still go for the no hyphen version. I have never been much of a hyphen type of guy.

StupidScript

10:43 pm on Dec 22, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Aesthetics aside:

1) Some search engines add weight to a listing that uses hyphens to separate distinct words in the path, including the domain name, directory names, and in file names.

It's easy to see how their software could parse out potential keywords from a hyphenated domain but have difficulty doing that with a non-hyphenated domain.

2) It's absolutely easier to read with hyphens, which could "sink the hook" a little bit deeper into the potential visitor when they are scrolling through pages of listings.

"mypersonalrevenuesite.com" is almost invisible next to "my-personal-revenue-site.com" ... if you see what I mean.

Note that while underscores (_) instead of hyphens (-) result in an even more easily-read domain name, search engines typically do not treat them the same. Where a search engine might treat a hyphen as a spacebar in order to parse out the keywords, an underscore does not receive the same recognition.

I'm still on the fence about which I prefer. I think I've been gravitating toward using hyphens, lately.

The only issue I can think of regarding publicity for hyphenated domains is telling people, "My domain is yadda-yadda-yadda.com, with hyphens between the yaddas", and them responding with, "Hyphens?".

treeline

10:49 pm on Dec 22, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Stick with no hyphens. Search engines can clearly seperate the two words now. Try using the google toolbar with highlight search terms on. Search for just one of your keywords, and it will highlight just that one word in your url in the results.

If people can understand the hyphen issue, they might forget later. Even when your brand is well established with a hyphen, worth billions, you go with walmart.com not wal-mart.com .

classifieds

11:10 am on Dec 23, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



StupidScript: Note that while underscores (_) instead of hyphens (-) result in an even more easily-read domain name, search engines typically do not treat them the same. Where a search engine might treat a hyphen as a spacebar in order to parse out the keywords, an underscore does not receive the same recognition.

Slightly off topic but do you think this applies to URLs?

mydomain.com/keyword1-keyword2.html
vs
mydomain.com/keyword1_keyword2.html?

StupidScript

6:25 pm on Dec 23, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Actually I was remembering this morning that underscores are NOT allowed in domain names, so that particular note only applies to directories and filenames. Sorry for the confusion! :)

In addition, I heard someone describing their hyphenated domain like this, "yadda dash yadda dash yadda dot com", instead of saying "hyphen". Might be easy enough to understand for the general public.

georgeek

6:49 pm on Dec 23, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Stick with no hyphens. Search engines can clearly seperate the two words now.
Not in anchor text which is where the hyphenated domain scores.

StupidScript

7:09 pm on Dec 23, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Illustrating:

Is that "george-ek", "geo-r-geek", or "geor-geek"?

I use "Stu-pid-Script", myself. :)