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Which top-level domain names are right for you?

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 3:37 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Design & Dev, Entrepreneur, Insider

at symbol typewriter 520x245 Which top level domain names are right for you?

New domain names are launching at a rate of seven per week just this past month alone. As more new domains become available, it may be difficult to figure out which is best for you to purchase.

Here’s a look at various industries and available domains that are right for you.

1. If you’re in finance

Finance-related domain names that have become available to pre-register include .bank, .loans or .ventures. Any strategy toward domain names that you develop should be primarily search-oriented, allowing your business to be pushed higher in Google.

According to NetNames, a popular site for gTLD info, users are more likely to develop what’s called a “domain name bias” – thinking certain domains are more legitimate simply because of the domain assigned to it.

Something like .ventures or .bank can be ideal for startups or small companies in personal and private banking sectors. Think Venmo, Simple (formerly BankSimple), and LearnVest-type services.

2. If you’re in the retail or fashion

Your best bets are going to be generic, near-basic gTLDs, like .clothing if you’re e-commerce, or .fashion or .style for more fashion-focused brands that are looking to amp up their brand and search ranking.

Elisa Cooper,  director of product marketing for brand protection firm Mark Monitor, advises that professionals should have clear policies set in place that determine when new domains should be registered, like a new brand product launch or brand campaign.

Highly specific domains in the retail industry are great for analytics-based startups and small companies who want to gain recognition in the same space as well-loved fashion brands, like Rebecca Taylor, Steven Alan, and the Alexander Wang’s of the world.

Registering a gTLD may not be a surefire way to make your brand as well-trafficked as these icons, but it can get you a leg up in the space.

3. If you’re a non-profit

Go for .ngo, .give, or .donate. The more basic, the better, as these businesses typically have the most uphill battles for being found. The non-profit industry is incredibly saturated and these brands often have limited budgets.

Risks involved in this sector include hackers who’ll buy similar gTLDs and incriminate your brand. They’re ever-popular for each of these categories, but especially for feel-good organizations whose Internet security policies typically aren’t high-level.

A simple domain like .give should be fairly popular, so it’s ideal to pre-register early on before demand drives up prices for smaller non-profits with conservative budgets.

4. If you’re an IT company

Your search strategy is probably down pat or at least halfway there, but if you need another layer of SEO optimization, choose a gTLD like .data, .search or .network as a social networking site.

It may be sort of a no-brainer, but defer this one to your tech team: high ROI and little effort. Offering a .support domain can also direct the right audience to the department they need.

Domains with strong IT keywords are best for everyone from data analytics software companies to small startups with your cat and your co-founder. Although you can keep optimizing it, remember to think long-term to ensure your investments will be worth the outcome.

5. If you’re in healthcare

The rise of ZocDoc and tech industries revolutionizing the medical industry mean there are more eyes than ever looking for health resources on the Web. Domains like .doctor, .care, .phd, and .dds can be useful in identifying the particular sector you represent.

Domains under the healthcare industry extend beyond strictly medicine. Wellness gTLDs like .yoga, .rehab., and  .diet can also help lifestyle brands increase their SEO capacities and authoritative voice.

6. If you’re an individual/consultant/job-seeker

Don’t skimp on the small stuff (but don’t sweat it, either!) It might be worth hiring a marketing consultant to analyze and come up with the best possible domain name for you, but personalize as much as possible.

Unfortunately, there’s no right answer or shortcut for this one since it depends on your work field. However, think about specific adjectives that make your brand special or that you want to highlight.

Domains such as .band (for music), .ads (for ad consultants), and .kitchen (chefs, specialty interior designers, or restaurants) are all examples of words that well represent an association with your industry.

7. If you’re thinking about launching a startup

Go for it, kid. gTLDs are most valuable to small businesses looking to make a name for themselves, so the more you can break out of your no-name startup with SEO and optimized keywords for people to find you, the better.

The only risk in this space are your competition, especially if you’ve got a common name in the English language. Buy before you’re bought out, and happy hunting!

Image credit: Shutterstock/ Lloyd Paulson

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Which top-level domain names are right for you?

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 3:37 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Design & Dev, Entrepreneur, Insider

URL search bar 520x245 Which top level domain names are right for you?

New domain names are launching at a rate of seven per week just this past month alone. As more new domains become available, it may be difficult to figure out which is best for you to purchase.

Here’s a look at various industries and available domains that are right for you.

1. If you’re in finance

Finance-related domain names that have become available to pre-register include .bank, .loans or .ventures. Any strategy toward domain names that you develop should be primarily search-oriented, allowing your business to be pushed higher in Google.

According to NetNames, a popular site for gTLD info, users are more likely to develop what’s called a “domain name bias” – thinking certain domains are more legitimate simply because of the domain assigned to it.

Something like .ventures or .bank can be ideal for startups or small companies in personal and private banking sectors. Think Venmo, Simple (formerly BankSimple), and LearnVest-type services.

2. If you’re in the retail or fashion

Your best bets are going to be generic, near-basic gTLDs, like .clothing if you’re e-commerce, or .fashion or .style for more fashion-focused brands that are looking to amp up their brand and search ranking.

Elisa Cooper,  director of product marketing for brand protection firm Mark Monitor, advises that professionals should have clear policies set in place that determine when new domains should be registered, like a new brand product launch or brand campaign.

Highly specific domains in the retail industry are great for analytics-based startups and small companies who want to gain recognition in the same space as well-loved fashion brands, like Rebecca Taylor, Steven Alan, and the Alexander Wang’s of the world.

Registering a gTLD may not be a surefire way to make your brand as well-trafficked as these icons, but it can get you a leg up in the space.

3. If you’re a non-profit

Go for .ngo, .give, or .donate. The more basic, the better, as these businesses typically have the most uphill battles for being found. The non-profit industry is incredibly saturated and these brands often have limited budgets.

Risks involved in this sector include hackers who’ll buy similar gTLDs and incriminate your brand. They’re ever-popular for each of these categories, but especially for feel-good organizations whose Internet security policies typically aren’t high-level.

A simple domain like .give should be fairly popular, so it’s ideal to pre-register early on before demand drives up prices for smaller non-profits with conservative budgets.

4. If you’re an IT company

Your search strategy is probably down pat or at least halfway there, but if you need another layer of SEO optimization, choose a gTLD like .data, .search or .network as a social networking site.

It may be sort of a no-brainer, but defer this one to your tech team: high ROI and little effort. Offering a .support domain can also direct the right audience to the department they need.

Domains with strong IT keywords are best for everyone from data analytics software companies to small startups with your cat and your co-founder. Although you can keep optimizing it, remember to think long-term to ensure your investments will be worth the outcome.

5. If you’re in healthcare

The rise of ZocDoc and tech industries revolutionizing the medical industry mean there are more eyes than ever looking for health resources on the Web. Domains like .doctor, .care, .phd, and .dds can be useful in identifying the particular sector you represent.

Domains under the healthcare industry extend beyond strictly medicine. Wellness gTLDs like .yoga, .rehab., and  .diet can also help lifestyle brands increase their SEO capacities and authoritative voice.

6. If you’re an individual/consultant/a job-seeker

Don’t skimp on the small stuff (but don’t sweat it, either!) It might be worth hiring a marketing consultant to analyze and come up with the best possible domain name for you, but personalize as much as possible.

Unfortunately, there’s no right answer or shortcut for this one since it depends on your work field. However, think about specific adjectives that make your brand special or that you want to highlight.

Domains such as .band (for music), .ads (for ad consultants), and .kitchen (chefs, specialty interior designers, or restaurants) are all examples of words that well represent an association with your industry.

7. If you’re thinking about launching a startup

Go for it, kid. gTLDs are most valuable to small businesses looking to make a name for themselves, so the more you can break out of your no-name startup with SEO and optimized keywords for people to find you, the better.

The only risk in this space are your competition, especially if you’ve got a common name in the English language. Buy before you’re bought out, and happy hunting!

Image credit: Shutterstock/Gajus

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Microsoft announces free PCmover Express tool to migrate XP users to newer versions of Windows

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 2:50 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider, Product Launches

Microsoft 520x245 Microsoft announces free PCmover Express tool to migrate XP users to newer versions of Windows

With the end of Microsoft’s support for the venerable Windows XP operating system now firmly in sight, the company has launched a free tool designed to make it easy for users to upgrade to a newer version of the Windows OS.

Announced today in a blog post, the PCmover Express software – a product of a partnership with Laplink, and essentially a pared down version of its paid-for PCmover software – will migrate a user’s files and settings from a Windows XP machine to a new device running Windows 7, Windows 8 or Windows 8.1.

It’ll happily copy across files, music, videos, email, user profiles and settings from your old PC to a new machine across your home or work network, and also allows you to specify exactly what you want to copy across, just in case you’d rather leave the accumulated junk behind.

XPProgress 13A1EBEB 730x547 Microsoft announces free PCmover Express tool to migrate XP users to newer versions of Windows

The software will be available for download in English later this week via WindowsXP.com. Later in March, it will be available in French, German, Italian, Japanese and Spanish. It will then be made available in Korean, Chinese, Russian and Brazilian Portuguese at an as-yet unspecified time in the future.

To ensure you don’t forget that XP is about to be put out to pasture, starting March 8 XP Home and Professional users who have Windows Update switched on will receive desktop notifications reminding them that support is about to end.

And April 8 is the date that XP support expires, just in case you had forgotten.

Featured Image Credit – Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

└ Tags: microsoft, news, syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Chrome OS dev channel now lets you run multiple profiles simultaneously

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 1:32 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Google, Product Updates

162273680 520x245 Chrome OS dev channel now lets you run multiple profiles simultaneously

If you own a device running Chrome OS, you can now sign in and run multiple profiles simultaneously.

The new dev channel feature means you can quickly alternate between different Google accounts without entering a password. After clicking on your profile picture in the system tray, a new option will appear (sign in with another account…) that will allow you to register an additional profile. Once you’ve entered your log-in credentials, you’ll be able to access the additional user profile instantly by clicking on the corresponding picture in the system tray.

While this in itself is useful, the update also allows you to easily move windows between the two; right-click at the top of your browser window, followed by the last option (move window to…). Chrome OS will then throw you across to the recipient profile and show the browser window with the sender’s picture in the top left-hand corner. The same can also be done for the Files app, which comes pre-installed with every new Chromebook.

To access the feature, you’ll need to move across to the Chrome OS dev channel, and then enable the corresponding flag by submitting this line into the Chrome browser: chrome://flags/#enable-multi-profiles.

Chromium evangelist François Beaufort says it’s still “highly experimental” at the moment, but if it proves popular there’s a good chance Google will develop it further and eventually release it for the beta and stable Chrome OS channels.

Read Next: Beyond Chromebooks: How Google could make almost everyone a Chrome OS user / Google partners with VMware to let Chrome OS users access their Windows desktops, data, and applications

➤ Chromium (Via Google+)

Image Credit: GLENN CHAPMAN/AFP/Getty Images

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Middle East tech news: What you need to know from February

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 1:05 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider, Middle East, Roundups

tehran 520x245 Middle East tech news: What you need to know from February

The MENA region continues its stop start movement towards embracing entrepreneurship and technology as its future. Here’s my roundup of some of the most important or interesting regional news that happened in February.

As always, if you’d like to draw my attention to an important regional story, please contact me on Twitter (@startupegypt) or by e-mail at omar@talkinsense.com. I can’t mention or respond to everyone who gets in touch, but I do read everything, so get in touch.

I continue to be surprised by the lack of the predator instinct in so many regional startups when it comes to courting publicity. Perhaps this is the single biggest factor affecting regional startup competitiveness, but I digress.

Awards and events

Si Ware 220x56 Middle East tech news: What you need to know from FebruaryLet’s start in California, where Cairo startup Si-Ware Systems won the Prism Award in the Test, Measurement, Metrology category at the SPIE Photonics West annual awards.  Si-Ware is one of the hidden startup stars of Egypt and the region. This award confirms the company’s technical prowess in chip design, a field many mistakenly think is beyond the capabilities of the region, but Si-Ware is also extremely profitable – definitely one to look out for in the future.

In Barcelona, 14 Arab startups participated in this year’s 4YFN – 4 Years from Now Conference.  The startups were, in no particular order: eTobb, Presella, KarTag, friendshippr, The Nawaya Network, Apstrata, Eastline Marketing, eventtus, Talfen, Zawarib, FOO, Bey2ollak, Shoop, and Sweepz. Perhaps this is a pointer to Arab startups coming to realise Europe is often a better fit when they want to venture abroad.  Samer Karam, founder of Lebanese accelerator Seeqnce and co-founder of virtual accelerator Alice, yet again played a key role and is cementing himself as a leading entrepreneurial figure regionally.

Iran held its fifth annual Web Festival in February. Thousands participated in the conference, Game Guise co-founder Amir Bozorgzadeh described the event to me as a “hotbed for the youthful Iranian tech community.” Iran has more positives than it’s given credit for, the huge 2014 awards winners list shows how much is going on internally.

Tehran also hosted another startup weekend event in February.  Indeed StartUp Weekend events continue to flourish regionally, Amman hosted yet another, Kuwait hosted its second such event, and Damascus hosted its very first Startup Weekend in February. Special mention must go to Damascus, in the midst of so much destruction, it’s heartening to see people come together to build.

MIT Media Lab delivered its much-anticipated innovation workshop in Abu Dhabi in association with Wamda. People attended from all over the region, and although people I’ve spoken have given it mixed reviews, this might just be down to the fact that some expectations were misplaced to start with, a common failing here.

The Western side of MENA saw the launch of Webdays, an international organization started by Farid Arab that organizes events to promote entrepreneurship and the digital sphere in that area. The first two events were in Algeria and Tunis respectively.

In nearby Morocco New Work Lab, an innovative co-working space and startup lab in Casablanca, continues to play a pivotal role locally. Founder Fatim Biaz is more often than not a judge in any local startup event, and she was a principal figure in the Moroccan group that attended the 4YFM conference mentioned above.

Milestones

Hsoub 220x73 Middle East tech news: What you need to know from FebruaryOne really successful Arab startup flying under the radar is Hsoub. A pioneer in the development of the Arabic web, February saw a landmark achievement for its ad network, as it announced that it now handles one billion moderated Arabic ads per month. This is all the more impressive given the company has had no external investment, was boot-strapped, and its team are spread between the UK, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and South Africa amongst others!

InstaPush became the first Arab, and perhaps regional, service to integrate with Zapier. InstaPush is a service that allows users, specifically power-users and developers, to receive instant smart-phone notifications for any transactions they care for. The timing of the move unexpectedly mirrored that of TNW Labs’ own Push.co with IFTTT.

The two major Cairo-based accelerators Flat6Labs and Tamkeen Capital cemented their regional expansion. Flat6Labs Jeddah graduated its first five start-up companies. Tamkeen Capital opened its “venture ally” firm in Kuwait, calling it Raneen Square.

Alexandria-based eSpace partnered with Google to deliver an online portal for the 2014 Turkish house elections being held next month.  eSpace built on its experience with the Egyptian elections site it developed. Although it can’t be described as a startup any more as it’s been going since 2000, it’s important in Egypt’s tech scene as many of its former employees leave to launch tech-focussed startups of their own.

Investment news

Bikhir 220x68 Middle East tech news: What you need to know from FebruaryIn a deal worth $2.1 million Morocco’s second largest classified site Bikhir announced the merger with / acquisition of (depending on who you talk to) Morocco’s largest classified site Avito. Bikhir is part of Schibsted Media Group, and this move confirmed the Scandinavian media group is prepared to go toe-to-toe with the other big classifieds player regionally, Dubizzle, which is part of the South African media group  Naspers.

Turkish VC firm Doga Venture announced that it’s looking to invest in Arab tech startups. It will offer early stage investments between $75,000 to $150,000, for a 5% to 12% equity share. This is extremely competitive compared to what’s offered by Arab VCs or angels.

I’ve been reliably informed that Black Spire Partners, a UK/US-based investment firm, has been busy scouting the region to set up shop, with a base possibly in Cairo. This follows on from reports by other reliable sources that Gust has also asking around, looking to include MENA in its impressive footprint.

Enterprise Qatar announced plans to launch a $100 million investment fund to help Qatari startup companies. This news further shows that the Gulf Arab states understand the importance of startups to their future. However, Qatar has the same problem as the other small Gulf states, a small local pool of talent, and a 51% local-ownership law that actively discourages expat founders.

The news reminded me that Kuwait announced a $7 billion startup fund some time ago that has yet to launch. An insider tells me that work is ongoing within parliament to change their 51% local-ownership law, but things are moving at standard Arab government speed i.e. super slow.

And that brings me right back to my first comment about the Arab lack of a predator instinct. With constant news that outside investors and startups are entering the region, local investors, entrepreneurs, and governments have to up their game considerably, or they won’t get the lion’s share of the startup spoils that are obviously there for the taking.

Image credit: Shutterstock

└ Tags: news, syndicated
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