A domain name is your brand’s permanent address online. It’s worth spending 10 minutes doing it correctly, because changing it later can cost rankings, trust, and email setup headaches.
Step 1: Pick a domain name that actually works
Keep it:
- Short (easy to type)
- Clear (no weird spelling)
- Brandable (not just keywords)
- Easy to say out loud
Avoid:
- Hyphens and double letters
- Trendy spellings that confuse people
- Long names like
bestwebdesignagencyforsmallbusiness.com
Step 2: Choose the right domain extension
For most small businesses:
- .com is still the strongest globally
- .net is fine if .com is taken
- Country domains (.gr, .co.uk, etc.) are okay if you mainly serve one country
If you want worldwide clients, .com is the best default.
Step 3: Think about brand protection (optional but smart)
If your brand is serious, consider registering:
- yourbrand.com
- yourbrand.net
- yourbrand.co
…and redirect them to your main domain.
This prevents copycats and confusion.
Step 4: Decide where to register (important)
Best practice:
- Register your domain where you get good DNS control
- Make sure you can easily manage:
- Nameservers
- A records
- CNAME records
- TXT records (email, verification)
Because if your DNS panel is weak, connecting hosting + SSL becomes painful.
Step 5: What you’ll need next (after buying the domain)
After registration, you’ll do one of these:
- Change nameservers to your hosting provider (easiest), or
- Set DNS records manually (A/CNAME)
That’s what the next post covers.
Want domain + hosting + SSL in one place?
If you want the simple route (no DNS confusion), you can get your domain, cPanel hosting, and SSL together — and I’ll help you connect everything correctly.







