Archive for March, 2010


Rick Latona Discusses TRAFFIC Milan

Rick Latona discusses next month’s T.R.A.F.F.I.C. conference in Milan.

The next Targeted TRAFFIC conference will be held in Milan April 27-29. I reached out to show organizer Rick Latona to find out what attendees can expect.

DNW: Your second conference of the year will focus on ccTLDs. You held a ccTLD conference last year. What will people who attended last year’s ccTLD show learn/experience new this year?

Latona: The ccTLD industry is constantly changing, much like the major gTLDs so regardless of your focus attending another show one year later is a good idea. One thing I’m excited about though is our panel about the Russian market. We’ve added a lot of new countries to the panel including those in Scandinavia and of course the Italian market.

The big answer to your question though is that things are always changing and you need to stay in tune with your market, there will be a great ccTLD auction, and networking with other like minded investors. It’s the same reason someone would go to a show every year in any other industry.

DNW: What special admission offers do you currently have available?

Latona: Right now we are reaching out to members of cctlds.com offering them special discounted rates. Most who know me know it is pretty easy to get a deal out of me. All you have to do is ask. If you want to come to the show but need help just email rick AT ricklatona.com.

DNW: Does holding an international show like this require extra preparation and planning? What extra logistics are required?

Latona: For one thing, we spend a lot more time on airplanes! Fortunately we have friends in high places. People like Michele Dinoia have helped us a lot with the Italian market. In Dublin we are getting help from Pinky Brand of .mobi. It would be a lot harder without their support.

DNW: You’re using Proxibid for the auction in Milan. What technically went wrong with Latonas.com in Vegas, and when do you hope to have those issues resolved?

Latona: The system is beautiful but it just isn’t fast enough to handle the load of a live auction and we won’t be using it again for that environment until we feel it is. Proxibid.com offers a great system and domainers at this point know how to use it because we’ve used it so many times. The issues on Latonas.com will be resolved whenever they are resolved. We aren’t going to rush it at this point because putting on a fast and stable auction is the priority. Getting the names sold is what counts.

How can people submit domains to the auction?

Latona: We try and make that part as easy as we can. TargetedTraffic.com, Latonas.com and RickLatona.com all have auction submission forms. You can use any one of them that you’d like and we’ll get it processed. Just don’t fill out forms on all of them!

DNW: What do you think went well in Las Vegas that you want to replicate in Milan? Conversely, what lessons did you learn in Vegas that you’ll apply to Milan?

Latona: We were really satisfied with our networking events and Test Track. While the Vegas show was small, we feel that it was a success and our customers got business done which is what counts.

While the European market and ccTLDs are fundamentally different they are also basically the same. We are all domainers in the end so most of the same tactics work. However, Milan will focus more on teaching about the individual ccTLD extensions. There are three full days of panels in Milan so the show will be very content rich.

DNW: No rest for the weary — you’ll be back at it 2 months later for the Vancouver show. Any updates or exciting news about the Vancouver show you can share with us now?

Latona: Vancouver is going to be a hit. The city sells itself and it’s a huge market. We are already selling tickets for the show and have sponsors lined up and joining. You’ll be hearing a lot more about it from us in the coming weeks.



Go Daddy Dropping .Cn, But Not China

Go Daddy drops .cn, but Chinese can still register domain names at the registrar.

In a hearing before the Congressional-Executive Commission on China today in Washington, Go Daddy Group Executive Vice-President and General Counsel Christine Jones explained that the company will no longer offer .cn domain names under strict requirements imposed by China.

On January 5, .Cn registry CNNIC announced without warning that non-Chinese registrars were no longer allowed to register .cn domain names to customers. This was part of a crack down on criminal activity and, most likely, free speech on .cn domain names. It then re-opened registration to registrars such as Arizona-based Go Daddy, but required them to collect a color headshot photo identification, business identification (including a Chinese business registration number), and physical signed registration forms from the registrant.

In light of the new requirements, Go Daddy decided to not re-introduce .cn registrations on its site.

But that’s where things get bad. China also required the 1,200 registrants who have registered 27,000 .cn domain names at Go Daddy to provide the same information — headshot, ID, and signed registration forms — or risk losing their domain names. Jones testified that only about 20% of Go Daddy customers provided this information and the others are at risk of losing their domain names.

Some media reports today are suggesting that Go Daddy will no longer offer registrations in China. But to be clear, it is merely dropping .cn as a registration option. Chinese citizens can still register unrestricted domain names such as .com through Go Daddy.

ICANN does not have control over what countries do with country code top level domain names. Other countries have made similarly retro-active moves, such as Argentina retroactively limiting the number of domains that could be registered.



MEC.com Hits $41,000 in Great Domains Auction

Three character domain in the spotlight.

Sedo’s monthly Great Domains auction ends tomorrow, and a three character domain in the auction is attracting a lot of attention.

MEC.com is up to $41,000 with its reserve met. Four different bidders are in on the action. There are a number of companies and acronyms for MEC, and the domain name appears to get substantial traffic. It was just parked on March 18, and Sedo’s stats show over 3,000 visitors to the domain name since then.

Other three character domain names that have met their reserves include bsh.com and lmd.com.

Ski.ch — a Switzerland country code domain name — has met its reserve at 15,500 EUR with 22 bids.

Keep an eye on Software.de. At 50,000 EUR, it’s below its reserve range of 100,000-250,000 EUR, but I expect some action on this domain.

Here are a few lower priced domain names that may be worth bidding on:

Trusting.com – currently $950 with reserve met

Granted.com – reserve is under $1,000

Points.org – reserve met and only $161 so far.



Reality Check: .Tel Enters First Renewal Period

.Tel travels into “renewal valley”. How will it come out on the other side?

The folks at .tel registry Telnic are certainly sweating this week: .tel domain names registered during general availability are hitting their first renewal period.

I call this period — when new top level domain names hit there first renewal period — the “valley of renewals”. Renewal raters during this critical time are a barometer for how the TLD is doing as a whole, and the rate can often signify the future of the domain.

When dotMobi hit its first renewal period it lost 10% of its registration base, similar to many other domains.

At the end of last year there were about 275,000 .tel domain names registered. With $35 million invested in Telnic, the base of registered domain names will hardly support the valuation the company must have reached. It needs to grow and it needs to grow quickly. Pay attention to this renewal period to see where it’s headed.

My guess is that many of the people who registered domains this time last year will renew for another year before making a judgment call. I renewed 100% of my .tel domain names: all one of them.



Some Schmuck Bought Schmuck.com for $66,000

German entity buys Schmuck.com domain name.

Sedo has sold the domain name Schmuck.com for 49,000 EUR, or roughly $66,000 at today’s exchange rates. Before you think it’s going to be some site about jerks or idiots, it looks like this may be a brand name in Germany, and it’s also a common surname.

Sedo broke the six figure barrier this past week with DolceVita.com selling for $120,000 to the shoe company of the same name, which got a nice upgrade to its existing domains (including ShopDolceVita.com and DolceVitaFootwear.com).

Another big sale was Pakistan.de for 65,450 EUR, or about $88,000 USD. I’m not quite sure what Pakistan has to do with Germany, but it could be a travel site.

Finally, take a look at the nice .org and .at sales below.

.COM
dolcevita.com 120,000 USD
schmuck.com 49,000 EUR
eramet.com 33,000 USD
erog.com 25,000 USD
datingsecrets.com 25,000 USD
fatum.com 15,980 USD
gearedup.com 14,000 USD
ilovelondon.com 10,000 USD
tourguides.com 9,999 USD (nice buy)
lakedistricthotels.com 9,100 USD
vodkas.com 9,000 EUR (nice buy)
insurancecar.com 6,550 USD
denvercityproperties.com 6,500 USD
bathroomtaps.com 5,995 USD
myjewelbox.com 5,800 USD
bodyinc.com 5,188 USD
buradanal.com 5,100 USD
activitygifts.com 5,000 USD
parentix.com 5,000 USD
thethreads.com 5,000 USD
verapizza.com 5,000 EUR
atticinsulationinformation.com 5,000 USD
firtex.com 5,000 USD

ccTLDs
pakistan.de 65,450 EUR
plenty.at 17,850 EUR
personalvermittlung.de 13,200 EUR
debtrecovery.co.uk 10,500 GBP
hommage.de 8,000 EUR
springkussen.nl 5,000 EUR
megapreis.de 5,000 EUR
zuno.ro 5,000 EUR
accelerate.de 4,500 EUR
enrolment.co.uk 4,200 GBP

Other
duiattorney.org 35,000 USD
financialplanners.net 8,500 USD
languages.info 5,275 USD
ls.org 5,199 USD
payback.mobi 4,500 EUR


« Previous PageNext Page »


TOP