Google Wants Your TV Names
September 30, 2010 by domainqueen
Filed under Domain News
There is a burgeoning hybrid opportunity for Google and TV domain names. The possibilities for names that Google can use, or that customers of home televisions with Google search capacity can see, opens up a new range for end users for websites, portals, and TV calendar listings. Names with “TV”,3D, set, “watch”, screen, home, channel, and other tech keywords are in demand.
Video plays a new role in ever more congruent SEO to domain name partnerships and value building online. Sites with “best of’ lists and video links will be fun home entertainment, family fun instead of programmed network shows stuffed with commercials. Websites composed of programmed TV viewing that families or niche watchers want can win the SEO wars. Nostalgia TV and cable viewing from video uploads and film segments has already made Hulu.com and Guba.com popular sites.
How does this change the business model for site development? Movie content makes search engine optimization the new driving force for website development. Articles and links to other TV based sites can also bring up the searchability quotient for these names and the sites behind them. Fansites becomes destination viewing with the new Google home TV site model. Your email list can start the home viewing wave and help get the word out.
This gives the SEO campaign for any TV name new legs. Given that entertainment is already a huge market for domainers and name auctions, and even deleting names and drop list auctions, domain developers should have at least one television name in the launch works with Google home-TV potential. Do fans want to blog or chat the shows while they watch? You bet they do. This is social TV networking.
Site managers and webmasters can formulate affiliate strategy to reach the home consumer. As home television and computer driven apps converge, a website with video and Google SEO matrices plugged in, wins. Because home viewers can surf your YouTube channel and maybe move on to your site if the spirit moves them. The webmaster without YouTube sinks in the SERP.
Chrome TV-searched visits to your site could be the elusive end user your sites has been waiting for. Google-owned YouTube connected sites will have a little more depth in the Google SEO than random video sites. All those domainers holding TV names and HDTV names and 3D names, as well as the Dot-TV extension of any relevant television or big screen tech name, there is a new focus for your end users and resale customer buyers.
Keukens.com Sold for $13,000. What does “Keukens” mean?
March 5, 2010 by Domain News
Filed under Domain Sales
The domain, Keukens.com was sold for five figure range at $13,000. The domain was sold at Sedo domain marketplace and I was thinking why the domain was sold at this price. I thought it might have got some meaning in other language and I looked at some stats.
The keyword “Keukens” appeared around nearly 2 million times in Google results and the top website which appeared for the keyword was Keukens.nl . I then think it has some meaning in Dutch (Netherland) language. When I searched for the meaning of the keyword “Keukens” in Dutch language, I found out that it had the meaning of “kitchens” in English.
Now I know why it goes for low five figure range.
Heavyhands.com was sold at 15,250 dollars to end user?
February 12, 2010 by Domain News
Filed under Domain Sales
The domain heavyhands.com was sold for $15,250 and I think it may have been sold to an end user. There are different products or services associated with the keyword “heavy hands“. Interestingly, “heavyhands” is trademarked since 1984 and the trademark is associated with “Dumbells and Weightgloves” and some other services.
The keyword “heavy hands” appeared around 82,000 times in the Google. It is searched around 2,400 times per month in the Google. It was certainly a nice domain sale given the fact that the keyword has been trademarked since 1980s.
optivo.com was sold over $20,000
February 9, 2010 by Domain News
Filed under Domain Sales
Optivo.com was sold recently for 15,000 Euros (around $20,750) and it was an interesting domain sale. I believe it was sold to an end user and it was a really nice domain sale for the seller.
I researched about “optivo” keyword and it was not very common and there are only 48,000 google search results. When I looked at the google keyword tool, there are hardly any searches per month for the keyword “optivo”.
The domain was sold at Sedo domain marketplace and I believe it was a really nice end user domain sale.



