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


Nobody in the U.S. buys another domain before considering a dot com first.
It's a fact that it was 90% a few years ago and now the average is 65%. Also, I would like you to show me how many startups from the last few years have used 3L co or io or shorter.
Nobody in Europe buys before considering a cctld, 90% of them they don't care about .com, I own .com where the cctls is used by companies from Rusia, from Germany and other EU countries and they don't care about com, in one case I offered them for free and didn't wanted it.Nobody in Asia or Europe buys a domain before considering .com or ccTLD first.
You can read my previous post. The answer is already there.
Yes, theory...when you sell a cctld to a EU company and you ask them if they don't want the .com as well and they say no, than you offer them to give them for free and they still say they that don't need it and you call this theory.In July 2017, just for example: I had an inquirer who contacted me about a dot com of mine and made a lowball offer of $500. for it, and had already registered the .us , .tax and .io exact equivalents of the domain name, and was trying to argue that these were just as good, he could just go with one of them and that he didn't even need my domain name, but I held firm, and eventually he came up to close to my price and he bought the dot com from me.
This is fact. Not theory like boker is theorizing about.
There is, I admit, at this stage much greater mindshare for legacy tld's like .org and .net.
Colin Campbell,
CEO .CLUB Domains
These extensions are out for almost 4 years and they are dead in the sales charts, completely dead. We have less sales compared to 2-3 years ago not more.
Yes, theory...when you sell a cctld to a EU company and you ask them if they don't want the .com as well and they say no, than you offer them to give them for free and they still say they that don't need it and you call this theory.
That way they have paid xxxx for a ngtld or are paying premium renewal when .com .net and the others are available.you think that .com doing poorly means your nGTLDs sell. Not the case really. You could outlaw .coms and most business would shift to .net and ccTLDs and your .longwords would still not have value.
It's not relevant, he said that because I've sold some expiring domains cheap here, than my opinion about domains it's not relevant, so I wanted to prove that everybody is doing it. Also, saying that he has a master in business he's right and the rest of us we don't know anything about business, so our opinion is not valid, so I had to to prove that he's business degree is not more valuable than the business experience of others.I can't see how this doxing is relevant to the discussion.
I may have sold a few names over here for $50 ea in the past. Some liquidation sale that was not even representative back then, and even less today.
So what ?
Way to put up a straw man there. I'm not defending the new names, but surely some potential buyers would think twice about paying the premium for a .com.why spend millions on branding when you can get your company brand IMega-Zone.biz for regfee?
Way to put up a straw man there. I'm not defending the new names, but surely some potential buyers would think twice about paying the premium for a .com.
In the past I have purchased .com names for development. Not anymore, my business model relies on search engine traffic. I don't see the point to pay for the .com when I can outrank it with one of the new extensions. Maybe I'm the only person on the planet not paying a premium to get the .com, but I kinda doubt that.
You're completely different from a lot businesses tho. Real businesses aren't reliant and only think of search engine traffic, they think bigger picture. If you just want some little, reliant on search engine traffic site, it doesn't matter what extension you use.
If I had a "real" business I would purchase the .com. My little sites do just fine without it. All I can say as an individual, I'm not buying .coms anymore for development. So that money is off the table, I'm probably not the only one.
No, people from the start have used different extensions, this isn't new. But bigger companies understand why you get the .com.
If I had a "real" business I would purchase the .com. My little sites do just fine without it. All I can say as an individual, I'm not buying .coms anymore for development. So that money is off the table, I'm probably not the only one.
yes but the thing is that this type of exact match alternative domains make only sense for small sites.
If you are going to build for the long-term and invest some money I would not build on a subpar URL.
If you have only 20% of people not remembering your URL or being confused by it you could fail in a highly competitive field.
You need something that people know and trust and recognize which is .com
The alt registries want to tell us that their domains are as good as .com or even better but this is not true. .com has a far higher brand value because of the billions that have been spent on promoting it. Everytime you see a website URL you promote .com, every time you see an ad with an URL you promote it. .com is one of the most if not the most visible brands in the world. It is virtually everywhere. These days people spend a lot of time online almost every day and .com follows them everywhere they go.
There is no way that word.word or word.ws is a valuable and recgnized as .com and that is why prices and sales for alt extensions will never be close to .com


