When a brand goes global, domain strategy extends far beyond registering a single .com. You need to protect your brand, build recognition, and prevent squatting across dozens of markets and languages. This guide provides a systematic domain layout strategy for global brands.
Core Principles
Balancing Brand Consistency with Local Adaptation
- A unified primary brand domain ensures global recognition
- Local domains in each region boost local user trust
- Both must be coordinated under a unified strategic framework
Three Layers of Domain Strategy
| Layer | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Core | Primary brand + essential TLDs | brand.com, brand.co |
| Defensive | Brand variations + common TLDs | br4nd.com, brand.net |
| Market | Target market ccTLDs | brand.cn, brand.de, brand.jp |
Market Prioritization
Assessment Framework
Evaluate domain investment priority for each market:
- Business importance: Revenue share and growth potential
- Squatting risk: History of brand domain squatting in that market
- User habits: Do local users prefer ccTLDs?
- Legal environment: Strength of brand protection laws
- Competitive landscape: Competitors’ domain positions
Priority Tiers
P0 (Register immediately): Markets you’ve entered or are about to enter; high brand awareness; frequent squatting activity
P1 (Register soon): Markets planned for 1-2 years; active domain speculators; low registration cost
P2 (Monitor primarily): No entry plans yet; monitor for squatting; register when needed
TLD Selection Strategy
Core TLDs
Every brand should hold:
- .com: Highest global recognition — essential
- .net: Common defensive registration
- .org: Prevent misuse (especially for controversial industries)
Industry-Specific TLDs
Choose additional TLDs by industry:
- Tech: .io, .ai, .dev, .app
- E-commerce: .shop, .store
- Finance: .finance, .bank
- Media: .media, .news
Regional ccTLD Priority
| Market | ccTLD | Registration Difficulty | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|
| China | .cn | Local entity required | Critical |
| EU | .eu | EU entity required | High |
| UK | .uk | No restrictions | High |
| Germany | .de | German address needed | High |
| Japan | .jp | Local contact required | High |
| India | .in | No restrictions | Medium-high |
| Brazil | .com.br | Brazilian entity required | Medium |
| South Korea | .kr | Local agent needed | Medium |
| Australia | .com.au | Australian entity required | Medium |
Multilingual Domain Management
Non-ASCII Characters in Domains
Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) allow non-ASCII characters:
- Chinese:
品牌.com,品牌.中国 - Japanese:
ブランド.jp - Arabic: Right-to-left character support
Registration advice:
- Register brand IDNs in local scripts defensively
- IDN adoption in practice remains very low
- Primary value is preventing others from squatting
Romanization Domains
For non-Latin script markets:
- China: Register pinyin versions (e.g.,
pinpai.com) - Japan: Register romanized brand names
- Korea: Register romanized spellings
Domain Governance Framework
Centralized Management
Large enterprises should build centralized domain management:
Organizational structure:
- Designate a domain management owner (typically Legal or IT)
- Establish domain registration approval workflows
- Create domain naming standards
Management tools:
- Enterprise domain platforms (CSC Digital Brand Services, MarkMonitor)
- Domain asset inventory (all domains, expiry dates, registrars)
- Auto-renewal and expiry alert systems
Registrar Selection
Global enterprise registrar strategy:
- Use 1-2 enterprise registrars for core domains
- Choose registrars with local support in target markets
- Ensure API access and bulk management capabilities
Annual Review
Conduct domain portfolio reviews at least annually:
- Confirm all core domains are renewed
- Assess whether new market domains are needed
- Check for third-party registrations of brand domains
- Update domain asset inventory
- Evaluate domain management cost efficiency
Domains and Brand Marketing Synergy
Regional Marketing Campaigns
Using local domains in regional campaigns improves results:
- China campaigns use
brand.cn - Germany campaigns use
brand.de - Local domains typically see higher ad click-through rates
Product-Specific Domains
Register dedicated domains for major products:
- Enables independent product promotion
- Can be decommissioned after product lifecycle ends
- Ensure proper association and redirection to the main brand domain
Summary
Global brand domain strategy is a long-term, continuously maintained system. Core elements include: clear market priority frameworks; comprehensive coverage across core TLDs and target market ccTLDs; centralized domain governance; and regular portfolio reviews. Domain strategy isn’t a one-time task — it evolves dynamically with your brand’s global expansion. Proactive planning prevents future brand protection crises and expensive domain buybacks.