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Domaining Domainers definition of the Domains Industry

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"Domaining Domainers" the place to auction, buy, discuss, learn, sell, trade or watch domains and the domain names industry. Connecting people with names and domains to domaineers. Live learn and share. Welcome to the future of online properties, the virtual real estate boom has begun.

For our first post we present the ‘Definition of Domaining" and a touch of domainers buzz via CNN Money.

Via Wikipedia:

  • Domaining is the business of buying, selling, developing and monetizing Internet domain names. Such domain name portfolios often include marketable generic dictionary-word domain names, or domains whose registrations had lapsed yet still retain reasonable traffic. Domain names are the addresses of the web and come in a wide variety of extensions (.com being the most popular).
  • Domainers is a slang term for individuals, companies, or organizations whose business model includes accumulating a portfolio of generic internet domain names. Although controversially and mistakenly compared to cybersquatters, Domainers differentiate and legitimize themselves by avoiding trademarked names and potentially contentious domain names, and refraining from typosquatting. They consider their conduct in buying, selling, and developing domain names to be in the same spirit as real estate investing. Domainers generate revenue via domain parking, through the resale of domain names and by developing domain names into fully functioning websites.[1] Domainers are also sometimes referred to as domain investors and commercial registrants and bulk registrants.
  • Domain parking is an advertising practice used primarily by domain name registrars and internet advertising publishers to monetize type-in traffic visiting an under-developed domain name. The domain name will usually resolve to a page containing advertising listings and links. These links will be targeted to the predicted interests of the visitor and may change dynamically based on the results that visitors click on. Usually the domain owner is paid based on how many links have been visited (e.g. pay per click) and on how beneficial those visits have been. The keywords for any given domain name provide clues as to the intent of the visitor before arriving.

    Another use of domain parking is to be a placeholder of an existing web site. A company might choose to use this method to redirect its website traffic to another website it owns

  • Domain Name:The term domain name has multiple related meanings:
  1. A name that identifies a computer or computers on the Internet. These names appear as a component of a Web site’s URL, e.g. en.wikipedia.org. This type of domain name is also called a hostname.
  2. The product that domain name registrars provide to their customers. These names are often called registered domain names.
  3. Names used for other purposes in the Domain Name System (DNS), for example the special name which follows the @ sign in an email address, or the Top-level domain names like .com, or the names used by the Session Initiation Protocol (VoIP), or DomainKeys.
  4. They are sometimes colloquially (and incorrectly) referred to by marketers as "web addresses".

Some buzz about the domain owners world from CNN Money at a live domaineers party.

By Paul Sloan Money.CNN.com

(Business 2.0) – On a balmy night in late October, hundreds of partiers, most sporting red or blue Hawaiian shirts, pack the Delux nightclub in Delray Beach, Fla. It’s a swank place–outdoor decks, two bars, plush, bed-size sofas scattered throughout–and the crowd arrives in chartered buses and stretch Hummers. Many head straight for the guy rolling cigars and toss back shots as if it were 1999. Which, to them, it might as well be.

They call themselves domainers. They make their living buying and selling domain names and turning their Web traffic into cash–lots of it. They have gathered in Delray Beach for a trade show called Traffic that this year boasts 300 paying attendees, more than twice the number that came for the first show, in ‘04.

As of December 2006 there are an estimated 8,000 to 10,000 individuals globally who make buying and selling domain names a part of their business. USA Today reported that many Domainers prefer to remain anonymous due to the competitive and controversial nature of their business.[2] In this same USA Today report, it is stated that known sales of 5,851 domain names generated $29 million in 2005, compared with known sales of 3,813 names for $15 million in 2004.

Domaining & Domainers most relevant domain related topics:

The Domaineers Domainer would like to thank @CoachDeb @MichDdot and #@MichelleM for resource links to get us off to great domain and domaining resources post start up.

Domaining Domainers Tags: definition, domainers, domaineers, domaining, domaineering

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