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


Your observation is correct, in Europe, at least in mature markets ccTLDs are dominant.At least in most european countries is like 85-90%cctld-10%com. I'm not saying that ngtld's are more popular than com or cctld's in any country, just that they are catching up...
Check these out: shop.link; star.house; sherpa.group; token.sale; learn.wine; op.media, all xxxxx sales (and others over 1500 xxxx sales, over 200 xxxxx sales and other xxxxxx sales like these) where the equivalent .com stays parked, or a blog or not revolving at all....if you still think that they are not affecting sales, you should think about it. I've hand regged com where the equivalent ngtld was used by companies with xx or xxx employees...that should say something as well.
By 'catching up' I mean that peoples start talking about them and by 'peoples' I mean young online business owners as drop hipping, online shops, blogs and others....so these are the first steps, it's like a trendy discussion between business owners at a beer, everybody bragging about what they have( regarding ngtld) and for what they will use them. So, it's not about the top business players, but still is a trend which is starting from the base. Also, 'com' is viewed mostly as something for the big businesses, so startups are using mostly cctld. By start using ngtld's, they make the connection between the local cctld and the international .com, so it's the perfect middle solution. It's also replacing some .io , co( and net), so probably it will start be used as a niche tld( new, young startup owners, who need something catchy).Your observation is correct, in Europe, at least in mature markets ccTLDs are dominant.
However, I am not convinced nTLDs are 'catching up': even if the number of registrations is increasing in absolute terms, it is not overtaking and not even keeping pace with that of legacy extensions. So if you look at market share, they become even more marginal over time. At best they become niche TLDs, but not mainstream TLDs.
So you really think that somebody it's paying xxxxx for ngtld just to be parked. Probably the reason is that the first 5 you've checked are bought in the last 1-2 months and they need time to develop something. Yes, I have 3 com which were available to reg and were used as ngtlds and there are at least two more related names available at the moment, one of them a media company working with Lego, Disney and other big companies.Are you kidding me. First 5 I checked. 3 are parked, the other forwards to the .net, one nothing is happening. You think that's going to move the needle forward?
Catching up on thread, dordomai already pointed that out.
"I've hand regged com where the equivalent ngtld was used by companies with xx or xxx employees...that should say something as well"
That you're regging company names? Are these generic? Give me some real examples of the names you hand regged in .com that are being used by companies on a new gtld.
By 'catching up' I mean that peoples start talking about them and by 'peoples' I mean young online business owners as drop hipping, online shops, blogs and others....so these are the first steps, it's like a trendy discussion between business owners at a beer, everybody bragging about what they have( regarding ngtld) and for what they will use them. So, it's not about the top business players, but still is a trend which is starting from the base.
So you really think that somebody it's paying xxxxx for ngtld just to be parked. Probably the reason is that the first 5 you've checked are bought in the last 1-2 months and they need time to develop something. Yes, I have 3 com which were available to reg and were used as ngtlds and there are at least two more related names available at the moment, one of them a media company working with Lego, Disney and other big companies.
When I catch some offers and reg the other names I will be able to give them as example, because if I say it now they will be gone in seconds. Yes, they are parked but we should use some common sense, accepting that somebody paid xxxxx for them to make money...not just to brag about them.What are the names?
They are just parked at this point.
When I catch some offers and reg the other names I will be able to give them as example, because if I say it now they will be gone in seconds. Yes, they are parked but we should use some common sense, accepting that somebody paid xxxxx for them to make money...not just to brag about them.
Let's take some examples over 5k:That happens across the board. Plenty of .coms that just stay parked. Some sales are marketing sales, not real.
Let's take some examples over 5k:
retail.global- some blockchain company
shop.link- shopping app with bonus points
web.media- some russian advertising company
pocket.watch-some kids related company with some known investors
act.today- some non profit company related to civic activities
op.media-some Finland based media company
innovation.group- UK based company
There are hundreds if not thousands of ngtlds used by companies (not only blogs and stuff) so that should say something. Also, the fact that all the big players( google, amazon, facebook) have invested hundred of millions in them should say something. Sure, you will not see 50% of the ngtls used in 1-2 years, but probably in 5-7 years the big picture will be completely changed.
they took away value? How much ? 0.1% 1%, 10% ?
The data here shows that they are dying not thriving. No real adoption by startups, no significant % of Alexa Top 1 M, no positive net growth in the past months (.com is still growing!)
https://namestat.org/s/newgtld-summary
https://www.namepros.com/blog/domain-data-ycombinator-startups-love-com.973209/
So if a domain contains a keyword it is automatically valuable? like sexcrm.com is a great domain because it has a million dollar keyword in it?
I think a keyword doesn't make a domain automatically valuable, anyone can have a domain with 'supply' in it even under .com
I think it is simply a poor naming choice not the result of good decision making, happens all the time.
One of the recent switches I remember was from monkey.capital to monkey.com. as soon as they could afford it and a suitable name was available, they left. One does hardly ever see the reverse of it. What does this tell us?
Yes because people will remember the domain and emails won't end up in spam filters.
Over 9 out of 10 companies will want a .com over a storage for their main web presence.
.storage is an unknown extension and word+storage.com works very well.
I own job.supply and it ranks better than jobsupply.com
C'mon. jobsupply.com is a parked page. I would hope you rank better than a parked page.
And - https://www.google.com/search?q=job+supply&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8
You can rank with any extension, that's not news.
Hold up, I just checked. job.supply is a Uniregistry lander. What are you ranking for exactly?
Point being on even playing field where two registered domains have no content. The ntld ranks hire on googles search pages organically.
there are others who have found ntld to be useful for organic traffic.
shoe.supply has expired(ebay.com with shoe.supply)
Indeed, some companies are using them for redirects or for secondary sites, but less often as primary URLs. I myself do not think they are proven enough for serious, large-scale projects. And also, I know they are not regulated like traditional extensions, something that most end users are not even aware of. If they knew what domainers know they would shun them even more.Big fortune 500 companies may never switch off their 2-3letter precious .com's - but many of these F500-2500 companies have actually rolled out projects and webpages that redirect to a domain hack or ntld.( meaning the decision was made not to use a .com -thus effecting growth) For short globally relevant extensions - people/companies will find use for them...
Again, it's wishful thinking. Even if that happens it will take forever to become the new norm. But the trends we are seeing so far are clear: nTLDs are not even keeping pace with the so-called old stuff. So let's acknowledge today's reality before making predictions about some kind of alternate future.Once the public becomes more aware of the ntld program - its a possibility choosing an ntld could become the norm for american small-businesses/brick and mortar shops and even other countries around the world.
A beggar at the front door of the restaurant will also put off customersTheres an old saying in the restaurant business "even if the guy next door only sells free water hes gonna steal business from you"
with this
"I own job.supply and it ranks better than jobsupply.com"
You're just making stuff up.
You didn't not give me a search term where it ranks higher. First, parked pages generally aren't ranking for anything besides maybe a search on the exact url. They're both parked pages. Both have the same keywords, job supply. The .com would probably rank higher in your scenario anyway.
Then you go on with other examples, I have no idea what you're talking about:
"there are others who have found ntld to be useful for organic traffic.(ebay.com with shoe.supply)"
shoe.supply? It's an expired page -
shoe.supply has expired
http://domain-registrar.storage.googleapis.com/expired.html?shoe.supply
So how is ebay finding that url useful for organic traffic exactly?
http://www.shoe.supply -
404. Thatโs an error.
The requested URL / was not found on this server. Thatโs all we know.
Ok then....home.supply for amazon.com - theres a plentiful list..


