We remember friends and colleague’s names more readily than gobbledegook type names, but you don't often see personal names as business websites. Is a possible reason for this, the person may think it is vain?
I see quite a few marketers use their name as a Find-It site for all their other websites.
Rod
In certain industries the firstname secondname seams to be the norm, for example fasion and fragrence, Tommy Hillfiger, Georgio Armani etc
obviously a lot of brand names have been engineered to sound good, and are perhaps not based on a real person.
I guess the key is.. Does it sound good? does it sound trust worthy? and is it easy to remember? Possibly more importaint it is likely to be accepted as a name in your industry.
Mack.
I would say for a woman it's not a good idea to use your last name unless you intend to keep that name even after a possible divorce in future.
This is why a lot of women choose to keep their maiden name after marriage, so they don't lose their professional identity.
It makes sense to use a name as a domain for professions where your name is your brand, like writers, journalists and actors. It also seems to work well for anyone with a claim to celebrity, such as TV chefs.
Another minor advantage to having your name as a domain is that, unless it's very unusual, you will get type-in traffic from curious namesakes.
If I made a business out of the site, I see a big problem.
Suppose I decide to retire and do something else?
Who's gonna buy a site with my name instead of the name
of some biz? - Larry