A name can make of break a web site. I am of course talking
about a Domain name.
You may think there is nothing to it. Pick a catchy domain name
that rolls off the
tongue, check that it is available and if it is go ahead and
buy it. It couldn’t be any
harder that that can it?
Well, yes it can. Just stop and think for a minute. You have
bought the domain name,
designed and built a great looking website, and launched it out
onto that great world
wide web. You have got a great Reciprocal Link Exchange on your
site and you have
reached a reasonable Google Page Rank.
Then you decide to get an Auto responder to have a mailing list,
and that is when your
troubles start! Let me tell you my story…
I don’t know if you have heard of Stone Evans – the Home Biz
Guy? He runs the Plug
in Profit Site. http://www.pluginprofitsite.com/main-3509 Well
I bought into his
business. I had to decide on a domain name before he built my
website. I chose the
name martinsoffers.com. I though that was quite cool as my name
is Martin and my
site would be advertising offers.
Part of the Plug in Profit Site is you get your own Auto
Responder, filled with a 360
day newsletter ready for when you sign up subscribers. I went
ahead and bought a
good quality leads package and loaded them into my auto
responder.
All was going well. Or so I thought.
After a while, I noticed I was not getting any response from my
good quality leads (on
average you should expect around 1% sign up at the very least).
I did some searching
around, mainly in the Warrior Forum which is part of the
membership package of the
Plug in Profit Site. There I saw a series of posts on the
American Anti Spam Laws and
the effects it was having on the newsletters.
With the Auto responder, there was a spam check program. I’d
never used that before,
but I ran a few sample newsletters through the spam check. Boy,
was I in for a shock.
Every single one failed to pass the test. My auto responder is
probably like most
others, it has a scoring system and once it passes 5 it flags
up that your newsletter
would trigger the spam filters.
What I found most disturbing was that it was my domain name of
martinsoffers.com
that was scoring the most, 4.3 points each time it was
mentioned. And 2.3 points
because my email address was @martinsoffers.com.
Even a single word newsletter with just www.martinsoffers.com
scored 6.6. Way
above the threshold.
The cost to me, as a result of this has not just been to
register a new domain name. I
have had to completely redesign my website with my new name on
it. Cancel and
reopen a new account with my auto responder. And start again
with my Reciprocal
Links Exchange.
I have also had to start again from scratch with the Google
Ranking. And I have a
domain name that is next to useless to me or to anyone for that
matter. I only use it
now to direct traffic meant for martinsoffers.com to my new
website.
So, that’s my story, and my warning to you.
Before you go and register a new domain name, run it through a
spam check. If you
are going to use your web site for marketing the last thing you
want is for the spam
filters to stop your email getting through.
About the author:
Martin Wood’s newest report “What’s in a Name? and many other
articles, written by experts, are available to read on his
website http://www.twahs.com . Don’t forget to
subscribe to his weekly ezine “Home Business Tips.”