Why Your Band Needs Its Own Domain Name

From Spin Me:

When the Fox television network wanted to promote the TV series Bones online, it turned to its corporate sibling, MySpace, for help. Obligingly, they offered up the screen name ..Bones,.. which would be pretty easy to remember. Except, that screen name already belonged to a band in Louisiana that had put together a list of 2,100 friends.

Fortunately, some kind folks at MySpace reunited the band with its original screen name.

However, it..s another reminder that promoting someone else..s domain name on your printed material and press kit is an invitation to disaster. (Remember, $8 a year is all it costs to have your own domain name, even if you just redirect it to your MySpace page.) MySpace..s terms of service indicate that they can .. and will .. take back your screen name if they want to. It..s really nice to hear that they stuck up for a member this time, but you can..t guarantee that they..ll do it again.

And, for all the folks that think MySpace is never going anywhere, ask the senior members of your favorite music business bulletin boards what it was like when MP3.com vanished after it was purchased by an international media conglomerate. (Some folks are still stinging from that one.)

One Response to “Why Your Band Needs Its Own Domain Name”

  1. Mark S. Meritt Says:

    Here’s a question that some may think stupid, but I think it may be important. For a band whose name starts with “The” — e.g., “The Beatles,” “The Rolling Stones,” “The Killers” — is it better to include the word “The” in the domain name or not? Obviously if both domain names are available, a band should probably get both — as The Beatles did with beatles.com and thebeatles.com. In some cases, they’re not both available, and in some cases, bands seem to have chosen one over the other. Looking at band’s websites and MySpace pages, I see no real consistency — some include “The,” some leave it out. And with MySpace pages, you really do have to pick one even when both are available, because you can’t just have one point to the other as you can with domain names. I wonder what the impact is and if there is a “better” choice.

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