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Five Essentials for Safe and Strategic Campaign Domains
Why Register a Domain for Your Campaign?
The answer is simple: a dedicated campaign domain provides a unique and highly effective marketing channel. A specific domain reinforces your campaign’s core message and makes it more memorable for your target audience—especially when your marketing goes beyond digital channels. Often, a catchy, general keyword serves well for campaigns, such as festival, vaccination, shopping rally, or campaign. Since these terms are commonly used in online searches, a memorable campaign domain helps you stand out in search engines.
Five Tips to Prevent Campaign Domain-Related Threats
- Check Domain Availability Early. Before finalizing your campaign name, verify that the corresponding domain name is available. You can do this quickly through domain search tools. Matching the campaign and domain names strengthens brand recognition, and you can even redirect the domain to a specific landing page on your main website.
- Avoid Trademark Infringement. Choose a name that doesn’t infringe on others’ rights. Some catchy names might already be trademarked, and registering such a name can lead to its eventual loss. To be safe, search the European trademark database to ensure the name isn’t protected by a trademark.
- Register the Domain for at Least 3-5 Years. It’s wise to register the campaign domain for a period significantly longer than the campaign itself. Typically, campaign domains use memorable, broad keywords, increasing the chance others might want to acquire them. If the domain drives high traffic during the campaign, its value only increases. Since your investment in the campaign also enhances the domain’s visibility, prematurely giving up the domain wastes that investment. A 3-5 year registration period allows for maximum use while traffic and visibility remain high.
- Don’t Let Competitors Take Over. If you choose not to renew your campaign domain, it may end up at auction, potentially attracting attention from competitors. Once available, anyone can acquire the domain and even use it to redirect traffic to their own site. By maintaining control of the domain, you protect the traffic and interest your campaign generated.
- Maximize Domain Use Beyond One Campaign. Consider whether the domain’s keyword might serve for future campaigns or activities. A single domain can support multiple campaigns and direct traffic to relevant pages on your website. This way, the web traffic your campaign generates continues benefiting your brand in the long term.
In conclusion, a dedicated domain offers significant value for various marketing campaigns and short-term projects. Thoughtful management of your campaign domain ensures you maximize the benefits while avoiding potential threats. A .ee domain remains one of the best ways to reach Estonian customers effectively.
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Projects
Supporting Community Projects: What Impact Did .EE Achieve Last Year?
Every year, the Estonian Internet Foundation (EIS) supports projects that help grow and strengthen Estonia’s internet community. Over the years, our funding round has helped launch many initiatives, events, competitions, and educational programs. Now it’s a good moment to look back and see what the projects supported last year achieved.
Domain Registries in a Regulatory Maze: Reflections from the CENTR Legal & Regulatory Meeting in Stockholm
I participated in the CENTR Legal & Regulatory (L&R) working group meeting in Stockholm, where legal experts from European domain registries gathered to exchange views. This time, the focus was on the growing body of European Union legislation that increasingly shapes our daily work — rules we must constantly interpret, analyse, and implement in practice.
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E-evidence
Helen Aaremäe-Saar representing .EE at the European Commission’s e-evidence Working Group
Today in Brussels, the European Commission is holding an Expert Meeting on the Implementation of the e-Evidence Package, bringing together policymakers, technical experts, and Member State representatives to discuss the next phase of one of the EU’s most significant digital justice initiatives.