- Impact
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Have you heard that - 法律.com ("LAW" in Chinese) sold US$9,638.00 at snapnames.com?!
source - IDNClub.com
source - IDNClub.com
Why should be Chinese? It can be japanese as both are the same in this keywordPhio said:Is that legal? Just Kidding.
Yes I heard about it and somebody got the domain for a really good price. Within one year it may be worth 6 figures to a Chinese Law Business. Projections show that 25% of the internet usage will be in China within the next year.
westlife1127 said:neverthless, the chinese charactor .com is not as valued as that in english.com , they cannot overpass the price and the amount of potencial customers who speak and use english all over the world ..!!!
westlife1127 said:neverthless, the chinese charactor .com is not as valued as that in english.com , they cannot overpass the price and the amount of potencial customers who speak and use english all over the world ..!!!
Bramiozo said:How many sites target consumers ALL over the world ?
Assume we are talking about Dutch consumers.
If I want to buy english books I tend towards amazon or ebay, but overall we can assume that the Dutch consumer will on average look for Dutch books, will they choose an international website ? Of course not !
Imo you're right for specific themes that allow or even favor an international audience but overall, product specific domains will probably perform better using localized domains, either by extension or by the second level.
This reasoning can be extended to most products that require shipping/insurance or that have language specific requirements, the threshold to go to a non-local website is just to high for the average consumer. For one because of practicality, second because of communicational difficulties (whether they can understand english or not).
Imo, dominance of the english language is secondary to the location that is implied by the language of the domain.
I am positive that in a few years top product related non-english domains will reach similar prices as to what is payed is for their english equivalents.