|
Post by juthi52943 on Jan 1, 2024 5:36:47 GMT
Think about all the places you might have links that can't be easily clicked or selected: Videos or slides (especially “thank you” or “contact” slides) during presentations or webinars In printed materials, such as business cards, bookmarks, handouts or brochures. In journal articles or footnotes in books you want to get the most out of these mentions. They seem more professional and trustworthy A Job Function Email List potential (and long-standing) alternative to using a vanity URL is to use a service like bit.ly to create a short URL that looks like this: bit.ly/ CbvdJZZ While this might fit nicely into a tweet or footnote, it hardly inspires confidence. This link could point anywhere and people may well be wary of links with lots of numbers and characters like this. A vanity URL, however, gives a professional. Branded image and looks more trustworthy. People know what to expect based on the URL itself, which is especially important if they don't already know you (and therefore have no reason to trust you). They can be easily read aloud Vanity URLs look good on the page or screen but they also have the huge advantage of being able to be read aloud easily. If you want to mention your social profiles on a podcast page.
|
|