.COM vs newer domain extensions












1















I have a website with a new TLD. I am not trying to advertise here, but listing the domain names is the only way I know how to articulate this question.



I have both, theboss.host and thebosshost.com registered. I chose to use the former, the shorter version for my website.



I am wondering if potential visitors have an aversion to the newer TLDs. Should I just go with the .com even though it is much longer? Are there any SEO implication to using the more obscure domain extenstions?



I think my question is more anthropological/physocological than technical. I would love to hear from anyone with experience or has a solid opinion on the matter.










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    1















    I have a website with a new TLD. I am not trying to advertise here, but listing the domain names is the only way I know how to articulate this question.



    I have both, theboss.host and thebosshost.com registered. I chose to use the former, the shorter version for my website.



    I am wondering if potential visitors have an aversion to the newer TLDs. Should I just go with the .com even though it is much longer? Are there any SEO implication to using the more obscure domain extenstions?



    I think my question is more anthropological/physocological than technical. I would love to hear from anyone with experience or has a solid opinion on the matter.










    share|improve this question







    New contributor




    K Tysinger is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      1












      1








      1








      I have a website with a new TLD. I am not trying to advertise here, but listing the domain names is the only way I know how to articulate this question.



      I have both, theboss.host and thebosshost.com registered. I chose to use the former, the shorter version for my website.



      I am wondering if potential visitors have an aversion to the newer TLDs. Should I just go with the .com even though it is much longer? Are there any SEO implication to using the more obscure domain extenstions?



      I think my question is more anthropological/physocological than technical. I would love to hear from anyone with experience or has a solid opinion on the matter.










      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      K Tysinger is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      I have a website with a new TLD. I am not trying to advertise here, but listing the domain names is the only way I know how to articulate this question.



      I have both, theboss.host and thebosshost.com registered. I chose to use the former, the shorter version for my website.



      I am wondering if potential visitors have an aversion to the newer TLDs. Should I just go with the .com even though it is much longer? Are there any SEO implication to using the more obscure domain extenstions?



      I think my question is more anthropological/physocological than technical. I would love to hear from anyone with experience or has a solid opinion on the matter.







      domains top-level-domains






      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      K Tysinger is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      K Tysinger is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question






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      asked 5 hours ago









      K TysingerK Tysinger

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      New contributor





      K Tysinger is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






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      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















          2 Answers
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          active

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          2














          If we're to go by this 2016 survey, general consumers do not trust the new gTLD domain extensions:




          We found that roughly half of consumers are uncomfortable visiting
          websites ending in new domains, and only 9% of consumers feel
          comfortable doing so.



          In terms of their overall security, almost half of respondents report feeling less secure online thanks to the
          introduction of the new gTLDs. This figure is slightly higher than last year too, showing that the wider domain
          industry hasn’t yet done a good enough job to educate the public and organisations about the benfits on offer.



          Trust in the new Internet survey 2016 discussion paper - nccgroup




          However if your website is targeting more savvy or technical users, it stands to reason that they will be more familiar with the new extensions, understand how they work, and know that they usually don't imply any reduction in trust.



          The .io domain is a great example of a "gTLD" that is often used to target tech-savvy users. While technically not really a gTLD it does function like one in practice - standing for "input/output" - and it is popular among the tech startup community.



          Of course it's 2019 now so people may be more familiar with the new gTLDs than they were three years ago. But they likely haven't yet attained the same level of perceived trust as .com, .net, etc.






          share|improve this answer































            2














            Explaining to someone that your site is at anything(hyphen/dash/minus)youwant.com became a nightmare (for me, personally). Avoid using anything that will put you in a position where you have to explain your DNS to a potential site visitor. It negatively affects traffic flow. Telling people your website is at domain.com requires no further information. Everyone understands it, it's comfortable. .net, .org, and some others are commonplace as well. Use the most logical domain name (preferrably with a more familiar extension).


            Using .host makes sense to you. But there's a good chance that seeing it on your marketing materials will make everyone do a double take. Tell some of your friends what your domain will be... do they need an explanation for a site called mydomain.host (with no .com)?


            That should tell you all you need to know.






            share|improve this answer























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              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

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              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              2














              If we're to go by this 2016 survey, general consumers do not trust the new gTLD domain extensions:




              We found that roughly half of consumers are uncomfortable visiting
              websites ending in new domains, and only 9% of consumers feel
              comfortable doing so.



              In terms of their overall security, almost half of respondents report feeling less secure online thanks to the
              introduction of the new gTLDs. This figure is slightly higher than last year too, showing that the wider domain
              industry hasn’t yet done a good enough job to educate the public and organisations about the benfits on offer.



              Trust in the new Internet survey 2016 discussion paper - nccgroup




              However if your website is targeting more savvy or technical users, it stands to reason that they will be more familiar with the new extensions, understand how they work, and know that they usually don't imply any reduction in trust.



              The .io domain is a great example of a "gTLD" that is often used to target tech-savvy users. While technically not really a gTLD it does function like one in practice - standing for "input/output" - and it is popular among the tech startup community.



              Of course it's 2019 now so people may be more familiar with the new gTLDs than they were three years ago. But they likely haven't yet attained the same level of perceived trust as .com, .net, etc.






              share|improve this answer




























                2














                If we're to go by this 2016 survey, general consumers do not trust the new gTLD domain extensions:




                We found that roughly half of consumers are uncomfortable visiting
                websites ending in new domains, and only 9% of consumers feel
                comfortable doing so.



                In terms of their overall security, almost half of respondents report feeling less secure online thanks to the
                introduction of the new gTLDs. This figure is slightly higher than last year too, showing that the wider domain
                industry hasn’t yet done a good enough job to educate the public and organisations about the benfits on offer.



                Trust in the new Internet survey 2016 discussion paper - nccgroup




                However if your website is targeting more savvy or technical users, it stands to reason that they will be more familiar with the new extensions, understand how they work, and know that they usually don't imply any reduction in trust.



                The .io domain is a great example of a "gTLD" that is often used to target tech-savvy users. While technically not really a gTLD it does function like one in practice - standing for "input/output" - and it is popular among the tech startup community.



                Of course it's 2019 now so people may be more familiar with the new gTLDs than they were three years ago. But they likely haven't yet attained the same level of perceived trust as .com, .net, etc.






                share|improve this answer


























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  If we're to go by this 2016 survey, general consumers do not trust the new gTLD domain extensions:




                  We found that roughly half of consumers are uncomfortable visiting
                  websites ending in new domains, and only 9% of consumers feel
                  comfortable doing so.



                  In terms of their overall security, almost half of respondents report feeling less secure online thanks to the
                  introduction of the new gTLDs. This figure is slightly higher than last year too, showing that the wider domain
                  industry hasn’t yet done a good enough job to educate the public and organisations about the benfits on offer.



                  Trust in the new Internet survey 2016 discussion paper - nccgroup




                  However if your website is targeting more savvy or technical users, it stands to reason that they will be more familiar with the new extensions, understand how they work, and know that they usually don't imply any reduction in trust.



                  The .io domain is a great example of a "gTLD" that is often used to target tech-savvy users. While technically not really a gTLD it does function like one in practice - standing for "input/output" - and it is popular among the tech startup community.



                  Of course it's 2019 now so people may be more familiar with the new gTLDs than they were three years ago. But they likely haven't yet attained the same level of perceived trust as .com, .net, etc.






                  share|improve this answer













                  If we're to go by this 2016 survey, general consumers do not trust the new gTLD domain extensions:




                  We found that roughly half of consumers are uncomfortable visiting
                  websites ending in new domains, and only 9% of consumers feel
                  comfortable doing so.



                  In terms of their overall security, almost half of respondents report feeling less secure online thanks to the
                  introduction of the new gTLDs. This figure is slightly higher than last year too, showing that the wider domain
                  industry hasn’t yet done a good enough job to educate the public and organisations about the benfits on offer.



                  Trust in the new Internet survey 2016 discussion paper - nccgroup




                  However if your website is targeting more savvy or technical users, it stands to reason that they will be more familiar with the new extensions, understand how they work, and know that they usually don't imply any reduction in trust.



                  The .io domain is a great example of a "gTLD" that is often used to target tech-savvy users. While technically not really a gTLD it does function like one in practice - standing for "input/output" - and it is popular among the tech startup community.



                  Of course it's 2019 now so people may be more familiar with the new gTLDs than they were three years ago. But they likely haven't yet attained the same level of perceived trust as .com, .net, etc.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 54 mins ago









                  Maximillian LaumeisterMaximillian Laumeister

                  3,3101727




                  3,3101727

























                      2














                      Explaining to someone that your site is at anything(hyphen/dash/minus)youwant.com became a nightmare (for me, personally). Avoid using anything that will put you in a position where you have to explain your DNS to a potential site visitor. It negatively affects traffic flow. Telling people your website is at domain.com requires no further information. Everyone understands it, it's comfortable. .net, .org, and some others are commonplace as well. Use the most logical domain name (preferrably with a more familiar extension).


                      Using .host makes sense to you. But there's a good chance that seeing it on your marketing materials will make everyone do a double take. Tell some of your friends what your domain will be... do they need an explanation for a site called mydomain.host (with no .com)?


                      That should tell you all you need to know.






                      share|improve this answer




























                        2














                        Explaining to someone that your site is at anything(hyphen/dash/minus)youwant.com became a nightmare (for me, personally). Avoid using anything that will put you in a position where you have to explain your DNS to a potential site visitor. It negatively affects traffic flow. Telling people your website is at domain.com requires no further information. Everyone understands it, it's comfortable. .net, .org, and some others are commonplace as well. Use the most logical domain name (preferrably with a more familiar extension).


                        Using .host makes sense to you. But there's a good chance that seeing it on your marketing materials will make everyone do a double take. Tell some of your friends what your domain will be... do they need an explanation for a site called mydomain.host (with no .com)?


                        That should tell you all you need to know.






                        share|improve this answer


























                          2












                          2








                          2







                          Explaining to someone that your site is at anything(hyphen/dash/minus)youwant.com became a nightmare (for me, personally). Avoid using anything that will put you in a position where you have to explain your DNS to a potential site visitor. It negatively affects traffic flow. Telling people your website is at domain.com requires no further information. Everyone understands it, it's comfortable. .net, .org, and some others are commonplace as well. Use the most logical domain name (preferrably with a more familiar extension).


                          Using .host makes sense to you. But there's a good chance that seeing it on your marketing materials will make everyone do a double take. Tell some of your friends what your domain will be... do they need an explanation for a site called mydomain.host (with no .com)?


                          That should tell you all you need to know.






                          share|improve this answer













                          Explaining to someone that your site is at anything(hyphen/dash/minus)youwant.com became a nightmare (for me, personally). Avoid using anything that will put you in a position where you have to explain your DNS to a potential site visitor. It negatively affects traffic flow. Telling people your website is at domain.com requires no further information. Everyone understands it, it's comfortable. .net, .org, and some others are commonplace as well. Use the most logical domain name (preferrably with a more familiar extension).


                          Using .host makes sense to you. But there's a good chance that seeing it on your marketing materials will make everyone do a double take. Tell some of your friends what your domain will be... do they need an explanation for a site called mydomain.host (with no .com)?


                          That should tell you all you need to know.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 46 mins ago









                          elbrantelbrant

                          43119




                          43119






















                              K Tysinger is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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