Creative Domain Extensions for Personal Brands

5 dk okuma · Choosing the Right TLD
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## Creative Domain Extensions for Personal Brands Personal branding has fundamentally changed how we think about domain extensions. Where a business domain demands trust and memorability at scale, a personal brand domain can be clever, expressive, and personality-forward. The rules are different — and the range of viable options is much wider. This guide covers every meaningful option for personal websites, portfolios, creator pages, and professional profiles. ## Why Personal Brand Domains Are Different A business domain needs to work for a cold audience that has no prior relationship with the brand. A personal domain primarily serves: 1. **Warm contacts** — People who already know you and are looking you up 2. **Referrals** — People who heard about you and want to verify your work 3. **Professional contexts** — Business cards, email signatures, LinkedIn profiles, speaker bios In all three cases, the person already has context. They're not trusting the domain; they're using it as a lookup tool. This reduces the TLD Güven Sinyali burden significantly and opens creative options. ## The Established Personal Brand Extensions ### .me — The Personal Standard Montenegro's ccTLD (Ülke Kodu Üst Düzey Alan Adı) has been marketed globally as the personal domain extension since 2008. "It's the web address for me" is the clearest value proposition of any extension. Used by: Prominent journalists, speakers, developers, designers, and creators worldwide. - Registration: $15-25/year - [[Memorability]]: Excellent — firstname.me or lastname.me are elegant - Use case: Primary personal website, professional portfolio - Recognition: High — most internet users understand .me as personal Examples: about.me (a platform built on the concept), john.me, sarahdesigns.me ### .name — The Intended Option .name was specifically created for personal use in 2001. Unlike .me (which was a marketing-repositioned ccTLD), .name was designed as a personal gTLD (Genel Üst Düzey Alan Adı) by ICANN. Despite its perfect-for-humans concept, .name never gained mainstream traction. It works fine technically but lacks the cultural cachet of .me. - Registration: $10-15/year - Recognition: Low — most users unfamiliar - Best for: Supplementary domain, email address, defensive registration ### .page — Google's Personal Extension .page is a Yeni gTLD (Yeni Genel Üst Düzey Alan Adı) controlled by Google Registry, positioned for personal pages, link-in-bio sites, and simple web presences. HTTPS required (HSTS preloaded). - Registration: $15-20/year - Use case: Simple personal pages, link-in-bio style sites - Clean, minimal appearance ### .bio — For Creators and Speakers .bio positions itself as the extension for "your story" — appropriate for authors, speakers, thought leaders, and creators. Less common but distinctive. - Registration: $30-50/year (relatively expensive) - Niche recognition in creator economy ## Domain Hack Options for Personal Brands The most creative personal brand domains use country codes that complete a name or word. See Domain Hacks Explained: bit.ly, youtu.be, and More for the full methodology. Personal name examples: - **first.name** + [.me] → james.me, maria.me - **first + last.co** → johns.co, mariaj.co - **firstname + last** using ccTLD → sarahs.on (.on = Ontario, Canada) - **name.is** (.is = Iceland) → creative for "I am" positioning - **name.to** (.to = Tonga) → natural preposition - **name.so** (.so = Somalia — used by notion.so!) → "so" as continuative The SLD (İkinci Düzey Alan Adı) + ccTLD (Ülke Kodu Üst Düzey Alan Adı) combination that spells your name or something meaningful about you is the holy grail of personal domains. ## Professional Context Domains For specific professional contexts, purpose-built extensions can add credibility: **.design** — Graphic designers, UX designers, design studios - portfolioname.design - Clean, descriptive, growing recognition in design community **.dev** — Software developers, open-source contributors - username.dev - Strong recognition in tech; Google-operated, HTTPS required **.photography** — Photographers - yourname.photography - Long, but descriptive; recognized in creative industries **.studio** — Creative studios, independent creators - name.studio - Growing recognition; works for artists, designers, filmmakers **.work** — General professional use - firstname.work - Generic but functional **.pro** — Professionals of all types - name.pro - Legacy extension (2002) with restricted registration in some jurisdictions ## The Portfolio Use Case For designers, developers, and creative professionals, the portfolio domain has specific requirements: 1. **Short and shareable** — Goes on resumes, business cards, LinkedIn 2. **Professional appearance** — Not clever at the expense of credibility 3. **Email-compatible** — You may use [email protected] professionally Best choices for portfolio domains: **Tier 1:** firstname.me, lastname.design, firstnamelastname.com **Tier 2:** name.dev (for developers), name.photography (for photographers) **Tier 3:** Creative domain hacks that are memorable and on-brand Avoid: Long new gTLD names that are hard to say aloud (john.photography takes 7 syllables to recite) ## The Email Consideration Many personal brand sites double as professional email addresses. If you'll use [email protected] professionally, consider: - **.com** email addresses carry strongest professional trust - **.me** email addresses are universally accepted and recognized - **.design, .dev** email addresses may face occasional filtering, but much less than spam-associated extensions - Avoid .xyz, .online, .site etc for professional email ## Social Media vs Domain For personal brands, the domain often serves as the "canonical" presence while social media drives traffic. The domain strategy should complement your social presence: | Social Platform | Domain Strategy | |-----------------|----------------| | Heavy Twitter/X | Short domain for bio link | | Heavy LinkedIn | Professional, credential-signaling extension | | Heavy Instagram | Visual brand — .me or .page | | YouTube creator | Creator-economy extension (.tv, .me) | | Newsletter/Substack | Often Substack handles domain; personal .me for authority | | Podcast host | .fm or .audio for audio-first brands | ## Name Availability Strategies The challenge for personal brand domains: your name is likely taken on .com. Options: 1. **firstname-lastname.com** — Hyphenation is slightly awkward but works 2. **firstnamelastname.me** — Usually available, clean 3. **firstlastname.io** — Tech-credible for technical professionals 4. **hi.firstname.com** — Subdomain trick if you own the first name as a subdomain 5. **Domain hack** — Spell your name across SLD and ccTLD Use Domain Name Generator to generate creative combinations for your name. ## Budget-Conscious Personal Branding Personal sites are often personal projects — budget matters more than for businesses. | Extension | Annual Cost | Recommendation | |-----------|-------------|----------------| | .com | $10-15 | Buy if name available | | .me | $15-25 | Primary personal alternative | | .page | $15-20 | Clean, Google-backed | | .dev | $12-18 | Developer-specific | | .design | $25-40 | Designer-specific | | .photography | $20-30 | Photographer-specific | | .studio | $20-35 | Creative professional | | .bio | $30-50 | Speaker/author focused | Total portfolio recommendation: Register your primary domain + defensive .com if available. Skip elaborate defensive registration for personal brands — the cost-benefit math doesn't support it. For the decision framework that applies across all use cases, see TLD Decision Framework: A Step-by-Step Guide. For domain hacks specifically, see Domain Hacks Explained: bit.ly, youtu.be, and More.

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