- Joined
- Aug 6, 2006
- Messages
- 766
- Reaction score
- 16
Good Day my friends,
I'm hoping I can get some good feedback from the awesome .CA community on a property that i'm looking to do develop in 2011:
OK.ca.
I am generally not a very big fan of LL.ca names however this is one of the few that is an actual word in English that is spoken and used conversationally all of the time. It is also a very generic term so that muddies the water for me in terms of it's value and obvious development use. One of the nice things going for it is it would be virtually impossible to forget when branded properly, easy to market and the term has a very inherent positive connotation to it:
"Ok, let's do this"
"Ok by me!"
"Can I go to Billy's to play PS3 mom??"
"OK"
"Yaaaay"
etc etc,
You get the picture. There are only a few words in the english language that are two characters and even fewer that have an actual meaning, so by that nature alone this property finds itself in a very exclusive department. One of the questions is, does the generic nature of the name hurt it or help it in this case?
I welcome you to share any ideas, thoughts or past experiences with me as I look towards viable ideas for this property. As always, you guys and gals ROCK for taking the time to read and contribute.
Regards,
Jason
I'm hoping I can get some good feedback from the awesome .CA community on a property that i'm looking to do develop in 2011:
OK.ca.
I am generally not a very big fan of LL.ca names however this is one of the few that is an actual word in English that is spoken and used conversationally all of the time. It is also a very generic term so that muddies the water for me in terms of it's value and obvious development use. One of the nice things going for it is it would be virtually impossible to forget when branded properly, easy to market and the term has a very inherent positive connotation to it:
"Ok, let's do this"
"Ok by me!"
"Can I go to Billy's to play PS3 mom??"
"OK"
"Yaaaay"
etc etc,
You get the picture. There are only a few words in the english language that are two characters and even fewer that have an actual meaning, so by that nature alone this property finds itself in a very exclusive department. One of the questions is, does the generic nature of the name hurt it or help it in this case?
I welcome you to share any ideas, thoughts or past experiences with me as I look towards viable ideas for this property. As always, you guys and gals ROCK for taking the time to read and contribute.
Regards,
Jason