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Agency Domain Names

Agency names appear in every email signature, pitch deck, and award submission. Find a .com that signals craft and confidence before a potential client ever reads your case studies.

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Only letters, numbers, and hyphens allowed



What makes a good agency domain names

Sound like the work you want

Clients judge the agency name before they look at the portfolio. A name like "Forgelabs" signals engineering and precision; "Madewell Studio" signals craft and warmth. Decide what kind of work you want to attract, then pick a name that positions you for exactly that conversation.

Be geographic without being local

Agency names with city references ("Brooklyn Creative", "Shoreditch Works") are memorable locally but limit perception when pitching global clients. If you want to grow beyond your city, pick a name that has no implied geography but can still carry strong local identity in your market.

Avoid generics that every agency uses

"Creative", "Digital", "Studio", and "Agency" alone create no differentiation. These words have a place as qualifiers but cannot carry a name on their own. Pair them with an unexpected first word — a verb, a material, a process — to create something a client actually remembers.

Naming patterns from real agency companies

Material / craft noun

  • Pentagram
  • Sagmeister & Walsh
  • Wolff Olins
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Verb as studio name

  • Huge
  • IDEO
  • Made by Many
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Founding principle + works

  • Stinkdigital
  • Wieden+Kennedy
  • Droga5
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Collective / lab suffix

  • Instrument
  • Fantasy Interactive
  • F i v e
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Common questions

Should an agency use its founders' names as the domain?

Founder-name agencies (Ogilvy, Wieden+Kennedy) carry prestige and personal credibility. The downside: the agency becomes inseparable from the founders' departure or reputation. If you plan to scale, sell, or want the brand to outlive its founding team, a non-personal name gives you more flexibility.

What makes a strong creative agency domain name?

The best agency domains are short, end in .com, and project a clear creative or professional identity. Words like "studio", "craft", "lab", "forge", and "works" are strong qualifiers. Pair them with an unexpected first word — a number, a colour, a material — to create something distinctive.

Do agency domains need to describe the services offered?

No. The most memorable agency names are abstract or metaphorical: Huge, Droga5, AKQA. Descriptive names ("Digital Marketing Agency Co") rank for the wrong reasons and signal commodity rather than expertise. Pick a name that makes a prospect curious, then let the portfolio do the rest.

How do I find a .com domain name for my agency?

Use SharpDomainSearch and search keywords that match your agency's positioning: "studio", "lab", "forge", "craft", "works". We check live .com availability across hundreds of combinations and surface only names you can register immediately.

Is it better to have a short or long agency domain name?

Short agency domains (5–10 characters) are easier to say in a pitch, remember from a conference, and fit in email signatures without wrapping. However, agency names skew slightly longer than SaaS names because clarity and creative identity sometimes require more characters. Stay under 15 characters as a ceiling.

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