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MenuWhich name best suites a platform in which users can seek advice from experts on a variety of life problems?
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Yes. Hopefully you already own these domain names before publishing them like this but here's my 2 cents:
Crowdsage.com is pretty solid out of those options. All things being equal a .com is going to give you the edge in terms of credibility and many would argue SEO.
it does give you some minor problems that as a stand alone domain it's not clear whether you mean crowds age or "crowd sage" but it's not a bad name.
A brand is what you make it. A great name doesn't guarantee success by any measure but it can help you create a stickier brand and make you easier to find.
I've developed a process for coming up with names that works pretty well. It's a multi-step brainstorming process and it takes time but I would be happy to share it with you or even brainstorm together over Clarity.
Good luck with this.
Adrian
First of all, never publish a list of names you're considering unless you already own them as domains. Frequently, somebody will learn about your intentions, then go register your target domains in order to sell them back to you for much steeper prices.
That's unethical, in my view; but it happens. Sometimes company employees or contractors (e.g. web designers) do this. So I'd be cautious even with internal communications. But definitely avoid public statements.
That said, I'm not recommending that people go out and buy each & every name candidate in advance. Obviously that would be wasteful.
It's clever embedding the "why" pun within "wise" in Whyse.Life. However, while it functions alright visually, it fails when the name is heard. Far too many ambiguities, between the creative misspelling and the novelty suffix.
CrowdSage.com is the clearest name in the list. No ambiguities or extra details to remember. The others aren't good enough for you. Whether CrowdSage.com is a good choice or not, I can't say without further research.
Also agree with Joseph regarding the risks of sharing names that you don't already own. For me, I'd say wisechat.co is the best. Why? It's two dictionary words, there's no ambiguity when saying it out loud, .co has become as respected as .com. The reason I'm not for crowdsage.com is that 'sage' is not a word used commonly so you could still have to explain it - and you never want to have to explain or spell your domain/email/company name. Same applies to the first two, and wisespace.me is phonetically poor with two 's'. That's IMHO anyway. Happy to discuss in detail over a call. Good luck!
There are two types of name you can choose. First is branded name, these names doesn't make sense but when we say it's like awesome, like instagram, oyo.
Second is all about when a people pronounce it, listener will surely understand what type of company or venture it is example twitter, Gmail.
Related Questions
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If someone misspells my company when Googling, how do I make sure they find my site? Anything besides buying domain names of the misspelled versions?
Google Search is already smart enough to capture those misspellings and shows recommendations for the correct words. Assuming that your website has been around for a while, Google will show users the branded site first in the results pages so the clicks will go there. Google figures out possible misspellings and their likely correct spellings by using words it finds while searching the web and processing searchers queries. So, unlike many spelling correctors, Google can suggest common spellings for proper nouns (names and places), and words that may not appear in a dictionary. I usually use misspellings in my clients Paid Search campaigns to capture all the possible traffic when I see that there's a high number of searches for those variations. I advise against buying domain names for the purpose of capturing that traffic. It will help, though, for people entering the exact domain name directly into the browser. And if you do so, make sure that they all redirect via a permanent 301 redirect to the original one, but do not use them for tricky SEO purposes.WA
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What's the best way to manage over 200 domain names? I want to get a landing page set up on each.
I have been managing multiple domains/sites for my clients since a few years now and I think the easiest and best way to do it in your case would be setting up simple WordPress sites on each one of them and managing them with something like ManageWP(https://managewp.com/) . If they're niche domains, you can monetize them through ads or use them as affiliate sites. Selling them can also be also an option. If you can get the sites to look fairly nice and if they are niche domains, you can sell them on sites like Flippa(https://flippa.com/) . Overall, you have many options. I'd be glad to help you in detail through a call if you want.AT
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Can someone suggest a website where I can pay to have a good domain name created?
I'd recommend that you check out https://leandomainsearch.com for names. Perhaps look at two-word .com names or even look at purchasing industry-specific names with newer domain extensions like builder.io or builder.to then offering these directly to builders etcRP
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Will adding "app" or "try" to our domain name (.com given that we target non-tech consumers) mean losing meaningful traffic to our website?
I'd argue that adding "app" to your domain name *strengthens* your brand by making it more transparent and honest. It's accepted practice; see, for example, bufferapp.com and umergencyapp.com. "Try__.com," on the other hand, is less advisable: it sounds tentative and uncertain. For other URL options--slogans, extensions, puns--see my blog post: http://nancyfriedman.typepad.com/away_with_words/2014/02/a-pure-dot-com-domain-you-dont-need-it.htmlNF
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Why would Clarity use .FM for its domain?
Because other, more common domains were not available. FM is not exclusive to music, and is some times used to mean "for me"JS
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