I think there is a decline in demand and price of .com domains because of new gTLDs. What's your opinion ?


I don't have anything with .com, my online shops are using a .com, but I wonder how they will be affected by this change...to not be able to rank a .com in top pages says a lot. For what it's useful a brand using .com if nobody who will look for it through google will not find it. If you do some advertising and use just the link, you can use whatever you want, because it will be the same. I will try to buy most of the ctld equivalents in the counties where I sell, at least I will not loose to much. What's the point to own a good brand like icecream.com with good content and try to sell ice creams in a certain country outside US, when it will almost impossible to rank high in google with it, almost everybody using hjfej.fr in France or kjfkjrkhhk.de in Germany will rank higher selling ice creams than you in these countries ..it will be more cost effective to just use the cctls, at lest you will have a chance. If you count just on paid advertising, than is even worse. Why pay 2-3-10k for a .com domain if you are in France, Germany and even UK when everybody using a .fr, .de, .co.uk tld will rank much higher than you with 10% of your content?not sure what you mean but when I search locally I always got mostly ccTLDs(depending on the language)
one can't invest based on algo changes and could not for a long time. Google will make changes and reverse them a few months later only to reintroduce them again.
In 2017 domains don't matter that much in SEO. It is not that relevant what Google does with domains.What is important is that you have good content and strong brand.
When you buy a domain you buy a brand not a SEO hack. A brand will work when you have an extension that your target market internet users are most familiar with.
In France that means you buy a .fr. in China a .com and in Russia a .ru. If you want to target a global market you use a .com. There aren't any alternatives really.
In my opinion you are seeing what you want to see. For some reason you want to see .com dead. Nothing has changed really. I don't know what else to say.
I don't have anything with .com, my online shops are using a .com, but I wonder how they will be affected by this change...to not be able to rank a .com in top pages says a lot. For what it's useful a brand using .com if nobody who will look for it through google will not find it. If you do some advertising and use just the link, you can use whatever you want, because it will be the same. I will try to buy most of the ctld equivalents in the counties where I sell, at least I will not loose to much. What's the point to own a good brand like icecream.com with good content and try to sell ice creams in a certain country outside US, when it will almost impossible to rank high in google with it, almost everybody using hjfej.fr in France or kjfkjrkhhk.de in Germany will rank higher selling ice creams than you in these countries ..it will be more cost effective to just use the cctls, at lest you will have a chance. If you count just on paid advertising, than is even worse. Why pay 2-3-10k for a .com domain if you are in France, Germany and even UK when everybody using a .fr, .de, .co.uk tld will rank much higher than you with 10% of your content?
It's seems that it's almost impossible to rank if you use a english language shop and using a .com, trying to sell in a country using another language. If it's a .com but in local language, than you have some chances, but still one shop using a cctld and local language will rank much higher than you with half the content and seo. For example, for keyword 'news' I have found local news related blogs ranking much higher than most of the big guys from this industry, who are using a .com and english language. If the keyword is in another language than english, than is almost impossible to rank as well, for example for keywords 'motorcycles', a shop using .com and using the english language will have no chance for ranking better than a local shop using a ctls and the equivalent local keyword. For example, until now amazon, ebay and others were ranking much higher than my shops for tons of keywords, even if they were using a .com or other tld and english language. Now, they are nowhere to be find for the same keywords, so probably the small, local shops will have an advantage over the big general shops, with this update. I was using english language to sell in more than 10 EU countries using only one shop, but now I intend to use more cctlds and local languages for each country.I don't know. End-users have always preferred a ccTLD over .com I believe?
Also is it really impossible to rank? I see a lot of .com for various keywords in different languages.
Search for jeux en ligne or credit immobilier for example.
It's seems that it's almost impossible to rank if you use a english language shop and using a .com, trying to sell in a country using another language. If it's a .com but in local language, than you have some chances, but still one shop using a cctld and local language will rank much higher than you with half the content and seo. For example, for keyword 'news' I have found local news related blogs ranking much higher than most of the big guys from this industry, who are using a .com and english language. If the keyword is in another language than english, than is almost impossible to rank as well, for example for keywords 'motorcycles', a shop using .com and using the english language will have no chance for ranking better than a local shop using a ctls and the equivalent local keyword. For example, until now amazon, ebay and others were ranking much higher than my shops for tons of keywords, even if they were using a .com or other tld and english language. Now, they are nowhere to be find for the same keywords, so probably the small, local shops will have an advantage over the big general shops, with this update. I was using english language to sell in more than 10 EU countries using only one shop, but now I intend to use more cctlds and local languages for each country.

