Domain Name Branding Gone Bad: John Furst

blog.fcon21.biz Branding yourself as an expert is important, but not every personal name—nor every business name—is automatically the right choice as domain name. • Can people spell it? • Pronounce it? I—John W. Furst—wanted to know it. And made this short video experiment in Seth Godin’s Triiibes social network. Thanks to my triiibester friends • JD • Bernd „CoCreatr • Jean-Philippe who have made the effort and shot a video for me. I got by far more feedback in writing on the forum. The lesson! Ingredients for a great domain name. • brevity • easy to spell and to pronounce • not a trademarrk • easy to remember • optionally for SEO: contains keyword and benefit Set your priorities and pick some. Yours John W. Furst PS: What do you think? Leave a comment.

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www.tmssequoia.com Unfortunately there are scam artists who see an enticing job opportunity and know they can make money by duplicating the website and literally conning people out of their money. This creates fraud victims who lose money and trust. The businesses that were duplicated from lose trust from customers who get the wrong impression after scam artists have harmed their companyâ??s reputation. In order to protect you and to be better able to choose an MLM business there are some guidelines to follow. You want to first verify the company then you want to verify the site. Take the time to research the company. Make sure that it is legitimate. You can search domain names to see how long the site has been active. If the site is only a few weeks or months old do further research. The site could be a scam or it could be a new company. Check with the Better Business Bureau since they know if a company is legitimate or not. If the company is legitimate, check the site. Make sure that BBB symbols or other protections symbols appear on the site. Look for money back guarantees or trial period offers.

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