Google cautions businesses against generic keyword domains
Small businesses should register distinctive brand names instead of keyword-stuffed domains, according to Google Search Advocate John Mueller. Speaking on the 17 May 2024 “Search Off the Record” podcast, Mueller said generic domains often compete with large directories targeting the same terms, making it difficult for a new site to rank or earn recognisable links.
“I see a lot of small businesses make the mistake of taking a generic term and calling it their brand,” Mueller told listeners.
Mueller explained that a unique name helps customers and search engines connect brand mentions, links, and reviews to a single entity. He added that location cues and service keywords can be incorporated through on-page content, structured data, and a Google Business Profile rather than the domain itself.
The advice emerged during a conversation with fellow Search Advocate Martin Splitt, who runs a photography website. Mueller did not urge immediate rebrands but warned new ventures to prioritise memorability when choosing a domain.
Background on domain naming guidance
Google spokespeople have issued similar recommendations in past Webmaster Central office hours and Search Central blog posts. Exact-match domains lost their ranking advantage after algorithm updates in 2012 and 2016. Mueller has repeatedly noted that branded queries send strong relevance signals because they are less ambiguous and easier to map to a single site.
Marketing studies highlighted by Google show higher word-of-mouth recall for brands with short, unique names. By contrast, small firms that append geography or niche terms to an otherwise generic domain can dilute that recall and risk confusion with look-alike competitors or aggregator sites. Google suggests reinforcing local relevance through schema markup, accurate business listings, and consistent NAP (name, address, phone) data rather than relying on the URL string.
Source citations
- Search Off the Record podcast, “Common challenges for photography websites,” 17 May 2024
- Google Search Central Blog - “Improving search results for users and businesses,” 18 Oct 2016
- Google Webmaster Central - Office Hours Hangout transcript, 27 Apr 2022