.co $6 million wasted on .co registrations.

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Do you think .co will be a success?

  • This poll is still running and the standings may change.
  • Yes

    75 
    votes
    35.2%
  • No

    101 
    votes
    47.4%
  • Unsure

    37 
    votes
    17.4%
  • This poll is still running and the standings may change.

snoop

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Impact
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$6 million wasted on .CO registrations.

I am somewhat surprised at the level of interest in .co over the last couple of days, from bloggers claiming it is now in the "top 4 extensions" and being worth 10% of a .com to others talking about developing these names and other madness.

A few comments about .co,

1. In my view the main appeal with this extension is typo traffic. Having said that, looking at some Alexa rankings, compete scores and Google Adwords data I would say only the very best generic .co's are going to get much traffic. The registry made a calculated decision when deciding to go public. The main area is likely to be ™ names (registry passes the buck). Even then it seems the registry has done a good job connecting with big sites. Still I think the ™ typo area is the main opportunity.

2. Considering point one, that these names are totally confusing, how does it makes sense to consider developing these names names.

Would you develop a misspell?
Would you develop a .cm?
Then why would you develop a .co?

The extension is going to be totally confusing for the average person on the street. .biz would be a better choice for development.

3. Reg fees - they aren't cheap and it is going to suck out a lot of the profitability from these names. Whatever value was there is 25% of that with reg fees 4 times higher than other extensions.

4. It's different this time! Isn't it?

.ws, .cc, .tv, .biz, .info, .us, .eu, .mobi, .tel, .me.

Supposedly with every new extension it is going to be different. There is always some compelling reason or argument as to why the latest extension will succeed where other have failed. People will debate it for the next year or two.

In reality it never is different. People get excited for a few months. .co is cool and new, and the fact that nobody actuallly uses it isn't that important yet, after all there is time for growth. Then interest wanes, things turn out not quite as planned. A year later everyone is dropping. People then get angry with the registry saying a lot was promised and not delivered.

Why do the same mistakes keep getting repeated? The registry is setting people up for today, the day when they part with their money and register 200,000 .co names. Most of the money goes into the launch and promoting premium auctions. Afterwards doesn't matter much. Get ready to be strung along a lot.

6. Staged sales/usage: You've been sold to!

disrupt.co, t.co, o.co

There is not much genuine news in this. Disrupt.co was part of an advertising deal. Did you really think techcrunch just chose to use that name? o.co, a sale that appeared a few hours before the launch, the registry is pouring some fuel on the fire here. They want to get you excited for today.

7. Who is even using this extension?

This is .mobi all over again, instead of the big backers who weren't really backing (Google, Microsoft etc) we've got 3 well known sites supposedly adopting .co (Twitter, Overstock, Techcrunch), do you think these people will be anywhere near the extension in 12 months time? How significant is this usage anyway, a url shortener? Overstock doing a url redirect to their main site? Techcrunch promoting a site for a week or so?
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
.US domains.US domains
- very rarely I do agree with you, but here you are correct.

That is how it is in all extensions though, 95%+ of names registered by speculators should never have been taken.

BTW, .co is a success already.

In what way, for registrars? for domainers? I haven't seen much evidence of domainers making money. The only sale I've heard of is Mike Mann selling flying.co for $3500.

Ok, Mike Mann is on the list of people who have likely made money from it. He look to have a hundred or so names worth low 4 figures perhaps in the current market.

Take a look at flipping.co for evidence of how domainers aren't making money. There is hundreds of mainly one/two word and 3 letter .co's on it (they have already been screened for quality according to the site). I counted 14 names with bids, and most of those bids were barely above reg fee.
 
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Take a look at flipping.co for evidence of how domainers aren't making money. There is hundreds of mainly one/two word and 3 letter .co's on it (they have already been screened for quality according to the site). I counted 14 names with bids, and most of those bids were barely above reg fee.
Well you know the tune: ".co is new, give it some time".
Problem is that time does not automatically make domains more valuable.
 
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Well you know the tune: ".co is new, give it some time".
Problem is that time does not automatically make domains more valuable.

Time change
 
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I think this extention, like .co, .tv, .cc, .pro and other exotic extentions, is waste of money for regular domainers. Registrars are making money, not ordinary people registering domains in exotic zones. Some domains will sell, but you had to be at the beginning of the que to get one or few of top 1000 names.

Furthermore, renewals of $25-$30, i.e. 4 times the .com or .net annual fee, renewal costs will bite in the pockets of domainers with big .co portfolios.

I think in a year we will see a large step back in the number of registered .co domains.

Many people are saying .com is king. It is the fact of the last ten, twenty years. It will be the same for the years ahead. The more extensions will come to the market, the more valuable will the the dotcom.

Dotcom is unique, whereas all other "great" extensions - .tv, .pro, .cc, .mobi, already existing for many years, are just any other extensions used by endusers wanting to save money by not purchasing occupied .com, .net, .org domain and rather registering the desired names in exotic zones. Thus even if there are potential endusers will be considering .co domains, that are the endusers who what to save few additional bucks. People with money will not go for .co, they will go for gTLD. And domainers invested in .co will be in a pretty bad situation where occasional sales will not cover even the fraction of the .co portfolio's rebewal costs.

All above is my opinion, I might be right or wrong. The time will show.
 
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Well you know the tune: ".co is new, give it some time".
Problem is that time does not automatically make domains more valuable.

With all the hype though surely now is the time .co's should be getting decent activity, especially with some saying .co is already a success, yet even a site with prescreened names, several hundred fairly good quality terms, has got almost no activity. In my view that should be the first wakeup call for domainers in this market.

I guess another way of thinking of it is like this, one of the richest domainers in the world (worth tens of millions of dollars) sold flying.co for $3500 whereas flying.com sold a few months ago $1.1million. For the people who think these names are comparable to .net or .org, this is probably more like .biz levels. So if the names right near the top are worth low-mid 4 figures, where does that leave everyone who didn't have good connections with the registry and had to settle for whatever they decided to release?
 
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jk
 
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Yes...because of the new investors that are trying to pump the living crap out of it. Same with every new extension and the same fate will befall .co . I can't comment on .us. Someone like Brad would be in a better position to highlight its merits.



????? In what galaxy is it a success?

I agree, And further to say, .Co will have to run it's course with the general public, remember folks, most don't even know .co exists. So why would they buy a .co for their company or ect?

Time will tell, If it stimulates the domain economy, Go head on .co , Domainer to domainer sales just wont keep it going for a long period of time IMO
 
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The only way I would buy a .co domain is if it was a misspelling of a very common word or phrase, and was short, or it was a domain hack (like ta.co). I still wouldn't do that as soon as it comes out though, .net is taking what over a decade to be bought out, so there will be plenty of time to get good names and .co will most likely become more known and popular by then.
 
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Current count on the main site:

* 3 * 7 * 3 * , * 0 * 5 * 0

Come back in a week. If it's still under 400K then we can discuss.
 
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My typo .co's are doing GREAT!

When are we going to see a dedicated .co marketplace here at NP??
 
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My typo .co's are doing GREAT!

When are we going to see a dedicated .co marketplace here at NP??

It would be best if you make a request to the admin for a marketplace thread I think.
 
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My typo .co's are doing GREAT!

Any examples?

From what I can see of it the people who registered from that angle are mainly not doing well, and that is people experienced in the typo traffic game,

eg,

domainstryker.com/co-domain-auctions - I’ll pass on those .co auctions… KTHX

Has there been any .co listed for sale as having revenue? I am yet to see any.

Personally I thought there would be a good typo angle in this, though it looks to be more limited than I thought.
 
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I registered 5 .co domains all related to major cities in Colombia and
I intend to keep all of them for a few years or I'go to Colombia, find a nice Colombian girl and build a business for her based on my domains.
I hope she will be thanking me for my generosity every night
 
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Any examples?

From what I can see of it the people who registered from that angle are mainly not doing well, and that is people experienced in the typo traffic game,

Personally I thought there would be a good typo angle in this, though it looks to be more limited than I thought.

I belive, by logic, the best typos, domain hacks and such are still waiting for auction because more than one person bought a $300 dlls LandRush tickets for such names, so the best is still to come out.


I registered 5 .co domains all related to major cities in Colombia and
I intend to keep all of them for a few years or I'go to Colombia, find a nice Colombian girl and build a business for her based on my domains.
I hope she will be thanking me for my generosity every night

best business plan ever :lol:
 
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Guys,

Maybe i get a different picture here, BUT, why my 2 .co domain names aren't indexed after a week or so?

Why they load so slowly - in a fast server?

Anyone with same problems?
 
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Any examples?

for obvious reasons, no. hell f'n no! :lol:

i will say i picked up 60 names (i wanted a couple hundred but was beaten out), mostly related to top trafficed .com's and the results are about what i expected. higher in some cases - lower in others. i'll sell or drop the low ones and hold onto the high ones and will come out decently ahead. its not a killing but its always good to supplement the income even just a bit.

i did have one slight advantage - a few years ago a client had some .cm's parked with us ( yup - just prior to the ham's virtual takeover they'd managed to register a few). so when .cm opened up i had the good sense to stay out as i already knew there wouldnt be very many worth the 240 price tag. but in this case for 25 bucks that opened the field of profitability many fold. add to that a .co is far more potentially "useful" than a .cm and the political stability of the countries being worlds apart make the .co a viable tld for the long-haul.

i wont say they're gold in them thar hills but there is def some silver.
 
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Fin, you pick up any $1 a day typos?

My typos BLEW. Literally SUCKED! $500 flushed down the train.

In fact, so far for the month of August:

Total: (12) 201 11 $0.88

Lol some of the ones havent event registered a frieking hit!

meh, you win some you lose some.

for obvious reasons, no. hell f'n no! :lol:

i will say i picked up 60 names (i wanted a couple hundred but was beaten out), mostly related to top trafficed .com's and the results are about what i expected. higher in some cases - lower in others. i'll sell or drop the low ones and hold onto the high ones and will come out decently ahead. its not a killing but its always good to supplement the income even just a bit.

i did have one slight advantage - a few years ago a client had some .cm's parked with us ( yup - just prior to the ham's virtual takeover they'd managed to register a few). so when .cm opened up i had the good sense to stay out as i already knew there wouldnt be very many worth the 240 price tag. but in this case for 25 bucks that opened the field of profitability many fold. add to that a .co is far more potentially "useful" than a .cm and the political stability of the countries being worlds apart make the .co a viable tld for the long-haul.

i wont say they're gold in them thar hills but there is def some silver.
 
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So many newbie domainers have been deceived in the .co marketing ploys. It's hilarious to see it all unfold. Oh well, less competition in other playing fields. KEEP BUYING .CO - PLEASE EMPTY YOUR WALLETS!

I love how most all of the .co fanboys in this thread joined NP THIS YEAR.
 
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