Stop Being Defensive Over New TLDs And Market The Heck Out Of Brands, Online And Off: FT

There is much huffing and puffing from trademark holders over the coming new Top Level Domains for which ICANN began seeking accepting applications on 12 January for three months. The Financial Times is the latest to enter the fray with a column titled “Suffix wars are best left to politics and porn.”

The columnist notes that “almost everything about the introduction of new internet domain names stinks of self-interest.” The article says “the intermediaries that work with Icann, and have helped clip the coin of big brand-owners for the past 15 years, must know they’re on to a good thing.” The article cites the example of Afilias who note the complexity of TLD applications and then spruik their services to assist in this.

It then goes on to say that there were two events in 2011 that dispelled any notion that ICANN has its heart in the right place. These are “the unseemly speed with which Peter Dengate Thrush moved from chairing Icann to chairing Top Level Domain Holdings” and the approval of .XXX, with the registry, ICM Registry offering “companies the opportunity to block anybody else attaching their brand to the suffix, in return for a fee of up to $200 to cover costs. Owners of 80,000 trademarks paid up.”

The column notes that the costs for brand owners to run their own TLD may be $500,000 per brand. “But it’s not hard for consultants to convince paranoid executives this is small change compared with the risk to a multinational’s reputation from cybersquatting, piracy and fraud. Extract small change from enough companies and soon you’re running a lucrative protection racket.”

The idea that companies should register all permutations of their brands is given short shrift though, with the column describing this as a “never-ending task” and that “what happens in front of the dot is limited only by a potential troublemaker’s imagination. In any case, branding on the web is moving on. Entering and re-entering possible domain names used to be the best way to find a site. But search engines do the guessing now. Even if search is not the key to exploring Webs 5.0 and 6.0, it is hard to imagine typing of precise addresses will be.”

The column goes on to note that there are safeguards for new any TLDs and that “companies that decide not to participate in the latest initiative … can object if others register their brand, and the loser in any dispute carries the cost.”

The columnist then says that “instead of fretting about threats, chief marketing officers should drop their defensive posture and do what they’re paid for: market the heck out of their existing brand names, online and off.”

The FT column is available in full from www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/cf21aad0-4057-11e1-9bce-00144feab49a.html.

 

Shot.com domain name is up for sale

Techshot announced recently that it has hired LeadJen,a lead generation company ,to help them sell the domain name Shot.com .The domain has been appreasied to sell for $500,000

You can read the press release after the jump :

“In what may be an unconventional way to sell an Internet domain name, Techshot, a contract new product development company, has hired a lead generation company to help sell its unused domain name, Shot.com. LeadJen (www.leadjen.com), an Indianapolis-based B2B lead generation company, is using traditional lead generation tactics, such as email, direct mail and phone calls, to help Techshot (www.techshot.com) identify companies that may be interested in acquiring the domain URL.

According to LeadJen President Jenny Vance, when Techshot changed to its new name a few years ago, they began using Techshot.com for their domain rather than Shot.com. Their rebranding has been quite successful, so they decided to sell Shot.com. “We worked with Techshot in the past to generate leads for their engineering services, and the company trusts our work,” said Vance.

More than 60,000 online searches a month contain the keyword “shot,” according to Vance, who notes that LeadJen will be targeting companies in industries including sports, weapons and gaming.

Techshot gets several inquiries a month about selling the domain. Shot.com is unusual because it is short, memorable and uses the .com top-level domain. According to DN Journal, only seven of the top-selling domains in 2011 were four letter words with a .com top-level domain.
LeadJen anticipates that as many as 80 companies may be interested in bidding on the domain. Depending on the number of bidders, the domain has been appraised to sell for more than $500,000.”

 

 

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