$10,000 vs. $10 Domain Names: How Zomato Chose

Choosing a domain name is a critical part of the branding process. Many startup founders have the mentality that their business has to be built on a .com domain name, and branding decisions can be contingent upon availability and price for the exact match .com domain name. Owning a .com domain name was arguably even more important to startup businesses ten years ago, although most businesses still seem to want (or need) the .com domain name.

Zomato is a company that was launched in 2008 that helps people find new restaurants and dining experiences. The company has a unique brand name, but it almost chose a different name (Forkwise) because of the cost of the exact match domain name, Zomato.com. The startup’s naming decision making process was detailed in an Entrepreneur article I read this morning.

The article is well worth a read beyond the domain name aspect, but here is an excerpt from the article discussing the domain name decision the company made shortly after it received funding:

Personally, I couldn’t see why one would choose the staid Forkwise over the livelier Zomato- but Goyal has a sheepish smile as he explains the economics of the situation then, which was just after their seed round. “Zomato.com, the domain name was $10,000. And Forkwise.com was $10… So, I mean, that was a big deal for uslike, how do we spend $10,000 out of the million dollars that we just raised!” As a result, Goyal and his team were leaning toward choosing Forkwise- but that’s when Raghuvanshi intervened and made his voice heard. “He was quite pissed at us for dropping Zomato.com, which is such a cool domain name, and wanting to buy Forkwise.com,” Goyal remembers. “He actually offered to buy it for us personally! And then, I was like, if you have that much confidence on this to buy it personally, we will buy it ourselves, so, don’t worry about it. And that’s how we bought Zomato.com.”

According to Crunchbase, Zomato has raised nearly $250 million in funding to date, so the company seems to be doing well. I presume their branding choice played a role in the company’s success, although one could make the argument that Forkwise is also a decent brand name.

I did a Whois history search at DomainTools from 2007, and I do not recognize the name of the domain owner who likely sold Zomato.com. Forkwise.com is now owned by HugeDomains, and it has an asking price of $3,395. Perhaps, some day, it will become a competitor to Zomato. In the meantime, it looks like Zomato is doing well.

Elliot Silver
Elliot Silver
About The Author: Elliot Silver is an Internet entrepreneur and publisher of DomainInvesting.com. Elliot is also the founder and President of Top Notch Domains, LLC, a company that has closed eight figures in deals. Please read the DomainInvesting.com Terms of Use page for additional information about the publisher, website comment policy, disclosures, and conflicts of interest. Reach out to Elliot: Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn

9 COMMENTS

  1. did they get the 250 million because of their product or because the domain name has a good ring to it.

    their business is a good idea but it is kind of an overlap on so many others in that field/niche.

    is it really that easy to get bankers to let go of 250 million in hope that they might have the new myspace sorry i meant facebook

  2. Staying in India and working next to Zomato headquarters, I must tell you that Zomato is the monopoly in food ordering and delivery market here in India, besides providing restaurant reviews.

    It is one of the startups who made it big and transformed the food ordering and delivery market. So, you can guess the size of their business.

  3. When you buy bad cement the foundation will eventually crack!

    The burn rate in cash could of been much less and at a slower pace if they would of spent 750k to 1.5 million for a domain.

    That would be less than 1%. of the total raised for this company. When your competition for the home food delivery business is Amazon, Costco, Grub hub, hello fresh, blue apron among a dozen others you better have a great domain to begin with.

    The difference between a $10,000 name and $1,000,000 is quite drastic.

    Don Murray
    Domainpad.com

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