Archive for the ‘Domaining’ Category

Looking to Sell Your Website?

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

I’m looking to expand my roster of websites.

So if you’ve an old, unloved project that needs some tender loving care and a new home, I’m all ears. I’m looking for established sites with traffic. Decent domains are a bonus.

I’m not looking for:

  • ‘Turnkey’ sites (read: shoddy knockoffs)
  • Some old tat you can’t shift on Digital Point
  • Dropshipping sites
  • Smut

Interested? Drop me a line with the URL, price expectations and traffic/revenue stats for the year to date. I’ll aim to reply within one working day.

Dot.TK Free Domains: Don’t Call It a Comeback

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

tokelau-sunset.jpg

Think back to 2001. Altavista ruled the school in Nerdsville and AOL was cranking out enough free CDs to pave the Pacific. Business models were for squares, and ad revenue was for trad media, daddio.

Crazy days. Way back then, Dot.TK domains became the TLD of choice for spammers and scammers - the old school .info domain, if you will. Indeed, you’d be forgiven for concluding that the Tokelau islands‘ 1,300 citizens (pictured below) were all hard-grafting Viagra® salesmen and 419 scammers (in cahoots with PayPal’s *cough* ‘account verification team’).

The truth is less exciting (which is a shame, as my version would make a cracking tiki-themed reality TV show). The bijou South Pacific islands got their mitts on a TLD, and took the Yankee dollar Dutch guilder in exchange for allowing any Tom, Dick or beleaguered Nigerian Head of State the right to register domains gratis. The idyllic South Pacific islands now boast a staggering 1,300+ domain name registrations per capita.

tokelau-islanders.png

A recent McAfee study concluded that a staggering 10.1% of Dot.TK websites were home to spyware, spam, phishing scams or some other flavour of malware. Hilariously, US ISP RoadRunner once decided the only solution was to block every Dot.TK domain bar two.

Since the Dot.TK registry brags of serving 6,000,000 unique visitors daily, we can guesstimate that a staggering 606,000 internet users get the chance to be scammed every day of the year in the name of the Tokelau people (I guess I can kiss my Tokelau visa goodbye).

Why the dot.com history lesson? Dot.TK domains are getting a makeover, with some interesting news for online marketing aficionados, cheapskates, domain geeks and, hey, all you trademark owners out there.

They’ve given a young child some new crayons to draw a Dot.TK logo:

Dot.TK domains logo

They’ve coined a factually inaccurate strapline: “Renaming The Internet”. They’ve opened offices in Soho, London, seconds from Nonsense HQ and London’s finest burrito joint.

8berwickstreet.jpg

Heck, they’ve even crafted a mission statement, just like NASA. In the immortal words of MC Hammer, they now aim to be “too legit to quit”. Onwards with the news.

Free Domain Names

Common or garden Dot.TK domains remain free (read: longer than four letters, no ‘premium’ .tk domains, no trademarks). That’s right: free domain names. Be sure to read the quirky domain registration T+Cs, like the fact you lose your free domain if you get less than 25 visitors/day.

Free domains carry a Blogspot-style banner up top with contextual ads and thumbnails of popular .TK sites. Popular .TK sites? Hmm… I’d not be comfortable with promoting that kind of site. So lucky that paid Dot.TK domains start at $6.95/year. Ever wonder how Google stock hit $700? Witness Mountain View’s finest mercilessly monetizing those lucrative ‘Learn how to speak Tokelau‘ SERPs on Google.tk:

Google.TK ads

Dot.TK Contextual Ads

Fortunately for us, the Tokelau islanders are an ad-loving people. Dot.TK are launching a contextual ad platform to serve text ads on free Dot.TK domains. Forget the awful name (’Buy-an-Eye‘, anyone? ANYONE?), I’ll be investigating for cheapo, high volume traffic.

Plus every Dot.TK click you buy is one less user to get scammed on a Dot.TK domain. Signup now for launch notification by email. Rumours that Dot.TK registry emails arrive from the desk of deposed Nigerian President Shehu Shagari are yet to be confirmed.

Dot.TK Sunrise Period

Trademark owners have until December 3rd 2007 to claim their trademark domains
(NB. Google.TK is short on Tokelau sunrise photos, so make do with a Tokelau sunset up top).

Dot.TK API

The Dot.TK API allows you to integrate free domain registration into your site or application. While it’s hard to imagine Google.tk becoming a regular in your referral logs, throwaway Dot.TK domains could integrate well with noob-friendly web design packages, like the fabulous RapidWeaver.

Enough about Dot.TK domains. Go book your late, late summer break in Tokelau and be sure to share your top Tokelau tourist tips in the comments.

35 Discarded Web 2.0 Domain Names

Monday, November 12th, 2007

Web 2.0 Badges

There’s more to Web 2.0 than pointless AJAX, gratuitous gradient fills, and inexplicable invite-only betas. And I don’t mean getting a gushing TechCrunch writeup before you’ve got a business plan.

Any Web 2.0 startup worth it’s $15 billion valuation needs a brandable domain name. Something that’s available to register and sounds deep while meaning precisely zip.

Where to begin? Choosing a decent domain for your Boo.com-on-a-budget is a tough racket.

Relax. My company is not called Quality Nonsense Ltd for nothing. Sit back and get your folksonomies around these brandable Web 2.0 domain names.

I’ll relinquish all rights in exchange for a mere 1% equity stake in your world-class social-shopping-meets-Google-Maps meta-mashup.

(At the time of writing, these domains are all available. I buy my domains at Moniker, I highly recommend you splash some of that VC cash burning a hole in your pocket their way.)

  • ChillSuit.com
  • Bongari.com
  • WarmCuts.com
  • EarlyApples.com
  • PoisonedChalis.com
  • ClickyBump.com
  • WhaPop.com
  • DemonPanda.com
  • Katsoja.com
  • ZoomClimb.com
  • ApeNinja.com
  • Wikihog.com
  • Xjojox.com
  • Instadeath.com
  • Redivided.com
  • TheNonExistanceOfGod.com
  • TimeTravellingJesus.com
  • DeExist.com
  • MoreFoolMe.com
  • Autobesity.com
  • Bumbra.com
  • HowToBeUnique.com
  • Archetypically.com
  • Necessarium.com
  • ElectroBeatbox.com
  • Slowcality.com
  • FlyRiffs.com
  • WhyReadaBook.com
  • Hat3r.com
  • OneCarefulPwnr.com
  • Assassinologist.com
  • ManifestOcean.com
  • ChatterXL.com
  • Shuntster.com
  • DazzleBeat.com

(NB. Illustration c/o Web20badges.com).

New Years Resolution #1: Domaining

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

Forget condos and strip malls. Domain names, the real estate of the Web, have been delivering far greater returns. How some of the savviest speculators on the Net are making millions from their URL portfolios.

So starts an excellent Business 2.0 article on domainers - people who buy, sell and earn money from domain names.

The December 2005 write-up caught my imagination. But it wasn’t until I heard Jeff Libert (aka WebWork) speak at PubCon that I decided to dabble in domaining.

I thought the days of large-scale domain speculation were over. But the title of WebWork’s talk - “The $100,000 click” - made everyone in the room listen up (See Graywolf’s PubCon summary).

Everybody knows the value of a desirable domain (ie. lots of zeros), but Jeff explained exactly how he chooses domain names and makes money from his portfolio.

Unsurprisingly, resale value is often top of the list. But everything from lead generation to parking page pay per click ads can cover registration costs. That means a well-chosen domain portfolio can pay for itself in the short term and add a healthy source of income in the longer term.

Scoreboard’s post on domaining has given me the perfect target for 2007: aim to invest in one decent domain a day.

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