How Reserving a Domain Name Can Boost Creativity
What secrets lie within your creativity? For some, an early morning workout will produce the idea of the century while another person might find journaling to be most helpful. As they say, whatever works for you is obviously helpful. One idea which I have put into practice has been the reservation of domain names. This is a relatively low-cost practice which integrates your concept with the new web media. Let me explain.
Domain names capture a hint of an idea. It might be a project that you are working on or a company that you’d like to start. Each of these needs a domain name for a timely roll-out. There is of course a dilemma- do you create something and then grab a domain after the fact or do you buy the domain and then shape the concept around it? As often is the case, it depends on whom you ask. In my case, domain reservation activates something inside of me, a creative energy that just might click with an idea that I’m working on. In web 2.0, catching a domain might in fact make the difference between a successful product and a flop.
I’ll use my own story as an example. I started The Daily Saint, a productivity blog, in 2005 as a blog about being involved in ministry work. In the two years since then, my passion for productivity has grown and the blog reflects a more secular angle but the initial ministry component still bubbles up now and again. Ministry is a part of who I am and so I go surfing for domain names. I ask myself, “What name would capture my heart for ministry if I were to start a second blog?” It’s a great process to say the least and it stretches me to think creatively and find a unique angle for a new project.
What else can domain reservation do for you? Domain reservation can be useful in other ways such as:
Turn an idea into something concrete. When something in your head becomes matched with a website, product or organization, you’ve taken it to another level. An idea has become tangible and concrete.
Turn a concept into something communal. Having a domain name brings your idea into the marketplace, so to speak. By “going public” with your idea, others get to share in its development and maturation.
Give your ideas accountability. There’s nothing like RSS subscribers to keep you going in the blogging world. When hundreds or thousands of folks are reading your content every day, ideas take on weight and weight equals accountability.
Put some dough behind your creativity. Putting some money into an idea can also bring creativity to another level. With domain reservation at less than $10 per year, it’s an investment worth making.
Put some routine into your idea. It’s no secret- the best bloggers are “routiners”. They post regularly and well and have exemplary habits when it comes to bringing their ideas into the light.
If you’ve got an idea that you’d like to test on the open market, why not reserve a domain name today to give it some street cred? It’s as easy as searching for what’s available and then making the leap of faith towards commitment.
WRITER'S BIOGRAPHY
MikePierre
Mike St. Pierre is the creator of The Daily Saint, a productivity blog with a spiritual twist. Mike is a professional educator in New Jersey where he lives with his wife and three children.
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Comments
Ryan says on December 17th, 2007 at 10:31 am
When I think of a new web project registering the domain name is the first thing I do, sometimes even before deciding if it’s a worthwhile idea. Of course that means that I have a few domain names that I’ve been sitting on for a while and haven’t gotten around to doing anything with.
Having a domain name helps me during the design and coding because I can use that name in the design without having to worry about going back and changing it later.
It also helps to jumpstart ideas that I’ve forgotten about. A year later when I get that email telling me my domain for a project I never got around to is coming up for renewal it motivates me to go back and look at my notes and reevaluate the project and see if it’s worth doing or if I should just let the domain go.
John@123-reg says on December 17th, 2007 at 10:45 am
I think you’ve got this about right. And there are other advantages: if you’ve thought up a snappy name and it’s available, if you grab it then nobody else can.
It’s really frustrating to spend loads of time hammering out the concept or designing the site, only to find the domain’s been snapped up in the meantime.
mary says on December 18th, 2007 at 6:28 am
This has become a practice with me too. Like Ryan said, it does mean I have a lot of unused domain names sitting around, but what I do is create a spreadsheet of all the domain names I own and where they’re registered, and then whenever I get ideas for the domain names I make notes next to the name, with a little brief about the idea and what kind of structure I’ll want to use (blog, cms, static website, forum, etc). Unless it jumps right at me I then let these ideas sit and revisit them after a while. adding to them, sometimes deleting them and starting all over, etc. I’ve been refining some of them for a while now and I’m really happy to find that I’ve built really solid foundations for projects, and when I do launch them I know exactly what I’m doing.
fordy says on December 29th, 2007 at 7:11 pm
You could try http://www.domainnamesoup.com to find available domains for you to register.