Deep insight into the past and present of the new TLD business.
Minds + Machines Group Limited, aka MMX, released its final results for 2016 today. I found the shareholder letter particularly interesting.
MMX’s current management is not the group that founded the company. A lot has happened with new top level domain names (expectations vs. reality) since the company was founded, and the new management has restructured the company and its strategy. Therefore, the shareholder letter freely discusses the missteps the company made and what it is doing now to recover from them.
MMX started with a grand strategy of owning the domain name experience from end to end; playing the technical registry role, the business registry role, registrar, and even domainer.
Some of the losses from these businesses have been quite large, such as the registrar effort. The company also entered into a contract for one new TLD early on that it has had to pay millions of dollars to restructure.
The company has now shifted to a pure-play registry business.
The shareholder letter explains what it sees as workable new TLD model: extra cashflow when a new TLD launches, and then a focus on a sustainable business driven by renewals. TLDs are a subscription business, after all.
Of note, one of the three targets for the company is domainers. This was not the case with the previous management, which wanted to capture all of the upside from good domain names. I like how the letter describes this group:
“Domain investors who serve both as early pioneers, as well as marketeers, of new extensions.”
The company has changed its premium domain pricing so that domains renew at standard prices.
The rubber is hitting the road in the new top level domain name business. Companies are adjusting to the reality of the business, and I think MMX’s shareholder letter is a good summary of what has worked and what hasn’t.
Robert Monster says
I have spent the last several months getting to know the MMX leadership team, notably Toby Hall. Toby’s courage, energy, vision is being combined with a global approach to market adoptions. While it is still early days for the new TLD economy, I believe MMX will soon begin manifesting the type of hockey stick growth curves that analysts want to see. Donuts, Rightside, Famous Four, GMO, Uniregistry and others should take note.
Toby and I have a unique partnership that I am very excited about. I believe the partnership is a replicable model for registry operators who are seeking to align the emerging “Smart Web” with the very real trend of “Smart Cities”. The GDD Summit next month in Madrid and the launch of Smart.London in June are key events in the global unfolding of this shared vision for a Smart Web for Smart Cities.
rubensk says
I could only find 5 of the 7 unresolved strings they mentioned: .home, .llc, .cpa, .inc, .gay. Of those, .home will never come to auction due to security concerns. .cpa and .gay are more prone to go an ICANN last resort auction than to private auction, so the only strings where they might have some auction loss earnings are .llc and .inc, where all applications are more business-minded.