A linkname is a name that’s also a valid website.
will.i.am (musician)
del.icio.us (defunct social sharing site)
last.fm (music discovery site)
join.me (defunct online meeting site)
Radiat.in/g (musician)
- A noun used as the primary name to represent something
- Which contains at least one period ('.') so that it becomes a valid website
- Optionally contains '/' and any other characters that are valid in a URL
- Is a valid URL, if the implicit 'http://' is added at the start
Test: does it work if you type the linkname into a browser and hit enter?
And yes, linknames are different (although related) to domain hacks.
- Platforms (Instagram, TikTok, X) increasingly own the internet
- Creators are highly dependent on them
- Linknames can reduce platform dependency for creators
- Using a linkname:
- Signposts a website outside of platforms
- Tells your audience you’d like a direct relationship with them
- Makes your name stand out
- Simplifies marketing (name and website are one)
- Gently 'hacks' platforms which limit cross-promotion (e.g. Spotify)
- Bonus: turns your name into a link when used in many places
- Talking about linknames:
- Will increase their recognition and adoption
- As direct-to-subscriber models become increasingly popular, so will linknames
- Various linknames will become famous as linknames become more popular
Strong linknames:
- Used as the primary name to represent something
- Examples above
Weak linknames:
- Not used as a primary name, and therefore often the same as domain hacks
- Examples:
- Bit.ly
- AllEvents.In/London
- Linktr.ee
- May not be recognised as signposting a website
- Contain fiddly punctuation
How are linknames different to domain hacks?
Linknames are related to, and can overlap with, domain hacks. However:
- A linkname is used as the primary name for something, not just as its domain
- A linkname can optionally use pages at the domain to form the name, for instance the ‘/g’ in Radiat.in/g. This makes linknames easier to create vs. the more limited number of domain hacks
No. They are a naming convention, a bit like hashtags or handles beginning with ‘@’.
See Rationale.
See Rationale.
In a way, no:
- Linknames have existed in some form for almost as long as domains
But also, yes:
- Although linknames have been in use a long time, there has been no term for them beyond domain hacks — and as explained above, a linkname is more than a domain hack
- The practice of using a linkname as a primary name is still relatively niche
Here are three:
- RandomW.al/k, a street artist who paints their name in a way that makes it possible for people to find them online and connect with the rest of their art
- Cinnamon.Soy/Latte: a specialist coffee truck that’s been stung in its reliance on increasingly expensive Instagram ads, and wants loyal customers to join a newsletter hosted at their site where they’ll get updates on the truck’s location
- Wispy.World: a podcast about clouds which lists as a linkname across all podcast platforms to nudge fans towards content and cloud t-shirts on their site
Note: these are hypothetical.
Instructions:
- Figure out a name you want to call your project or organization
- Try to devise a linkname for it by adding '.' and '/' in a way that makes it a valid website
- You may use one of hundreds of TLDs
- You may prefer to devise your linkname by starting with the list of available TLDs
- Check if the domain is still available, and if so purchase it
- These tools may help:
- Domain.Garden, to search through hundreds of TLDs for domains that are available
- Namecheap, GoDaddy, Gandi etc., to purchase domains
- Cloudflare, which can manage your domain for free, and help you create redirects for any pages that would form part of your linkname
- These tools may help:
- Use the linkname as the primary name for your project or organization
Tips:
- You can also use subdomains if it helps you stylistically, e.g. will.i.am, del.icio.us
- You would first purchase icio.us or i.am, and then set up a subdomain at the site
- You can immediately redirect from your linkname to another website, if you don’t want to directly host a website at your linkname
- Anywhere across the real and digital worlds, provided it’s a place that allows the characters in your linkname to be used
- Spotify supports linknames
- Instagram supports some linknames (not those with ‘/’)