Thursday 12 December 2013

[Build Backlinks Online] The Next Domain Gold Rush: What You Need to Know

Build Backlinks Online has posted a new item, 'The Next Domain Gold Rush: What
You Need to Know'

Posted by Dr-Pete
In late 2012 and early 2013, companies were allowed, for the first time, to
apply for new TLDs (Top-Level Domains). There was a lot of press about big
companies buying swaths of TLDs â for example, Google bought .google,
.docs, .youtube, and many more. The rest of us heard the price tag â a
cool $185,000 â and simply wrote this off as an interesting anecdote. What
you may not realize is that there's a phase two, and it's relevant to everyone
who owns a website (below: 544 new TLDs â cloud created with Tagxedo).



Phase 2: TLDs go live

You may have assumed that these TLDs would simply be bought up and tucked away
for private use by mega-corporations, Saudi Princes, and Justin Bieber. The
reality is that many of these TLDs are going to go live soon, and domains within
them are going to be sold to the public, just like traditional TLDs (.com, .net,
etc.). I talked to Steve Banfield, SVP Registrar Services at Demand Media (which
owns eNom and Name.com), to get the scoop on what this process will mean for
site owners.

Gold rush 2014

ICANN had more than 1,900 applications for TLDs, and of those Name.com
currently lists 544 that will be available for sale in the near future. These
domains cover a wide range of topics â here are just a few, to give you a
flavor of what's up for grabs:

.app
.attorney
.blog
.boston
.flowers
.marketing
.porn
.realtor
.store
.web
.wedding
.wtf

This is an unprecedented explosion in available domain names, and you can
expect a gold rush mentality as companies scoop up domains to protect trademarks
and chase new opportunities and as individuals register a wide variety of vanity
domains. So, when do these domains go on sale, and how much will they cost? As
Steve explained to me, this gets a bit trickyâ

"Sunrise" & Pre-registration

Understandably, ICANN is reluctant to simply release hundreds of TLDs into the
wild all at once and upset the ecosystem. As the TLDs have been granted, they've
been gradually delegated to the global DNS and are coming online in batches. As
each TLD becomes available, it has to undergo a 60-day "sunrise" period. This
period allows trademark holder to register claims and potentially lock down
protected words. For example, Dell may want to lock down dell.computer or
Amazon.com may grab amazon.book. These domains must still be registered (and
paid for), but trademark holders get first dibs across any new TLD. Trademark
disputes are a separate, legal issue (and beyond the scope of this post).


Some registrars will allow pre-registration during or immediately following
the sunrise period. While you can't technically register a domain without a
trademark claim during the 60 day sunrise, they'll essentially add you to a
waiting list. This gets complicated, as multiple registrars could all have
people on their waiting list for the same domain, so there are no guarantees.
Some registrars are also charging premium prices for pre-registration, and those
premiums could carry into your renewals, so read the fine print carefully.

Facts and figures

Once sunrise and pre-registration end, general availability begins. You may be
wondering â when is that, exactly? The short answer is: it's complicated.
I'll attempt to answer the big questions, with Steve's help:

When do the new domains go on sale?

The first group of domains began their sunrise period on November 26, 2013,
and it ends on January 24, 2014. After that, additional domains will come into
play in small groups, throughout the year. To find out about any particular
domain/TLD, your best bet is to use a service like Name.com's TLD watch-list,
which sends status notifications about specific domains you're interested in.
Your own registrar of choice may have a similar service. The specifics of any
given TLD will vary.

How much will the new domains cost?

Unfortunately, it depends. Each TLD can be priced differently, and even within
a TLD, some domains may go for a premium rate. A few TLDs will probably be
auction-based and not fixed-price. Use a watch-list tool or investigate your
domains of choice individually.

What kind of a land grab can we expect?

With over 500 TLDs in play over the course of months, it's nearly impossible
to say. Some domains, like .attorney, will clearly be competitive in local
markets, and you can expect a gold rush mentality. Other domains, like .guru may
be popular for vanity URLs. Regional and niche domains, like .okinawa or .rodeo
are going to have a smaller audience. Then there are wildcards, like .ninja,
that are really anyone's guess.

SEO implications

Naturally, as a Moz reader, you may be wondering what weight the new TLDs will
have with search engines. Will a domain like seattle.attorney have the same
ranking benefit as a more traditional domain like seattleattorney.com? Google's
Matt Cutts has stated that the new TLDs won't have an advantage over existing
domains, but was unclear on whether keywords in the new domain extensions will
act as a ranking signal. I strongly suspect they will play this by ear, until
they know how each of the new TLDs is being used. In my opinion, exact-match
domains are no longer as powerful without other signals to back them up, and
it's likely Google may lower the volume on some of the new TLDs or treat them
more like sub-domains in terms of ranking power. In other words, they'll
probably have some value, but don't expect miracles.


There may be indirect SEO benefits. For example, if you own seattle.attorney,
it's more likely people will link to you with the phrase "Seattle attorney", and
since that's now your brand/domain, it's more likely to look natural (because
it's more likely to be natural). A well-matched name may also be more memorable,
in some cases, although it may take people some time to get used to the new
TLDs. To quote Steve directly:


What will matter is the memory of the end user and branding. Which is better:
hilton.com or hilton.hotel, chevrolet.com or chevrolet.cars, coors.com or
coors.beer? Today, it's easy to say the .com is "better" for brand recall, but
over time we'll have to see which works better for brand marketing.


My conservative opinion is this â don't scoop up dozens of domains just
in the hopes of magically ranking. Register domains that match your business
objectives or that you want to protect â either because of your own
trademarks or for future use. If you hit the domain game late and have a .com
that you hate (this-is-all-they-had-left.com), it might be a good time to
consider your options for something more memorable.


Todd Malicoat wrote an excellent post last year on choosing an exact-match
domain, and I think many of his tips are relevant to the new TLDs and any domain
purchase. Ultimately, some people will use the new TLDs creatively and
powerfully, and others will use them poorly. There's opportunity here, but it's
going to take planning, brand awareness, and ultimately, smart marketing.
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