|
Members
Of:
The National Association
Business Leaders
St.
Cloud Area Chamber of Commerce
International
Association of Web Masters & Designers (I.A.W.M.D)
Golden
Web Award Winners
2000-2001-2002
Absolute
Solutions
PO Box 7755
St. Cloud, Minnesota 56302
(320)420-1790
(320)259-1113

|
|
100 MB, shopping cart, online store, merchant account - Only $14.95

|
The New Dot-Biz TLD compared to
Dot-Com
Would a rose.com by any other Top-Level-Domain (TLD) smell
as sweet? Some entrepreneurs seem to think so. They're betting that they
can profit by investing in the new dot-biz extensions set
to go live this October. Once again, single generic words like
"business" or "home" will be up for grabs for use in
domains like business.biz or home.biz thanks to recent moves by Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), the organisation in
charge of managing the Internet's TLDs.
While dot-biz is not the only new TLD soon to be available, it is the one
most likely to challenge dot-com for a share of the domain market for
businesses and the one first expected to go
live - making it the new TLD of choice for some. But how valuable dot-biz
names will end up being remains to be seen.
Though the dot-biz TLD can clearly play a niche role as a less expensive
alternative to dot-com, the dot-com extension has several advantages over
the dot-biz TLD. First and foremost, the Internet grew up with the dot-com
suffix and that three-letter extension has been firmly imprinted into the
minds of every Internet user. This helps to explain why other General-TLDs
like dot-net, and dot-org are not as popular or profitable as their
dot-com counterpart.
Additionally, it seems likely that the biggest Internet
players such as Amazon.com will buy up their dot-biz extension and merely
redirect traffic to their dot-com site. Most of these companies have
trademark rights to the name already and are allowed to apply for them
before the general public.
This means two things: first, many very lucrative names will not be
available for entrepreneurs to buy, and second that companies will not
invest very much money to market their dot-biz extensions. Consequently
the dot-com extension will not receive anywhere near the amount of
marketing attention that went into promoting the dot-com TLD (don't expect
the Super Bowl in 2004 to be for dot-biz what it was for dot-com in
1999!). Without this push, the dot-biz extension will probably remain in
the background.
So it looks like the dot-com TLD will likely be the market leader for the
foreseeable future. But while many of "the best" dot-com names
are already registered, many are not being used. A recent study shows that
as much as half of the registered domain names are not in use. The domain
market will therefore center around trading names with the dot-com
extension that have already been registered on markets like Sedo.co.uk, or
Greatdomains.com. Here buyers and sellers of already- registered
names can connect with one another to utilize their valuable dot-com
domains.
But while the dot-biz extension will not eclipse dot-com, it definitely
will have an important secondary role as a cheaper and more accessible
alternative to dot-com. Just don't think
that business.biz to fetch the $7.5 million that its dot-com predecessor
did anytime soon.
|
Send
This Page To a Friend
TOP OF PAGE
|