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Domain Auctions: Heady Days
Domain name industry booming with multimillion-dollar sales, but is it sustainable?
June 25, 2007
By Leah Messinger
If hefty domain name prices are any indication, the dot-com resurgence may be headed for another bust.
Just take a look at last week’s live auction sale by domain name broker Moniker. On Friday at the Traffic conference in New York, Moniker beat its record for the largest sale of a single domain name at live auction. That sale went to Creditcheck.com, which took in a cool $3 million. When the day was done, Pompano Beach, Florida-based Moniker had raked in $10.9 million for brokering 115 names.
The rising attendance at these popular events suggests heated interest in the promise of riches from dot-com domains.
"Good domain names are appreciating faster than equities and real estate—by a lot,” said Fair Winds Partners co-founder and Internet consultant Joshua Bourne. He said there’s growing attendance of venture capitalists and private equity companies at the auctions.
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Amid the digital land grab was Moniker-brokered Seniors.com, which bagged $1.8 million, and Lick.com, which went for $60,000. VintageMotorcycles.com attracted $14,000 and Jewishdeli.com snagged $9,000. But many of the highest-priced domain names are privately sold, such as last year’s big-ticket sales: Diamond.com and Vodka.com, which earned $7.5 million and $3 million, respectively.
And it appears a new record may be in the works. Business.com, which sold for a then-unprecedented $7.5 million in 1999, could sell again soon for as much as $400 million, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Yet the industry doesn’t seem to be flinching or recalling its institutional memories of last cycle’s digital crash. According to Moniker CEO Monte Cahn, approximately half of the buyers at the auctions purchases highly coveted domain names to build online businesses. The other half of the buyers uses the domain names as a platform for online advertising.
Domain name owners can make money from these so-called parked web pages by signing up for Google AdSense or Yahoo Search Marketing. These ad programs place links on web sites based on keywords chosen by the domain owners. Web site owners and Google or Yahoo then split the revenue generated when visitors to the sites click on the advertising links.
Verisign estimates that the average amount paid per user click on an online ad in the first quarter of 2007 was $1.46. Terms such as “home equity loan” bring in more than $24 per click.
And the industry stands to grow even more, said Mr. Bourne.
He added that the increasing use of the Internet by a greater number of people broadens the audience base for online ads. Mobile Internet users, a growing demographic, also see a greater percentage of online ads, since they often type web site names directly into their browsers, said Mr. Bourne.
Direct navigation—typing a URL into a browser—is the main way Internet users end up on a parked ad page. That’s because many Internet users frustrated by unsuccessful web searches key in generic names such as hotels.com, in hopes of finding a faster route to their desired search topics.
The finally tally from the recent Moniker auction may eventually double as the silent auction portion of the event, which ends June 27, is expected to bring in between $3 million and $10 million, said Mr. Cahn.
From http://www.redherring.com
Domain name industry booming with multimillion-dollar sales, but is it sustainable?
June 25, 2007
By Leah Messinger
If hefty domain name prices are any indication, the dot-com resurgence may be headed for another bust.
Just take a look at last week’s live auction sale by domain name broker Moniker. On Friday at the Traffic conference in New York, Moniker beat its record for the largest sale of a single domain name at live auction. That sale went to Creditcheck.com, which took in a cool $3 million. When the day was done, Pompano Beach, Florida-based Moniker had raked in $10.9 million for brokering 115 names.
The rising attendance at these popular events suggests heated interest in the promise of riches from dot-com domains.
"Good domain names are appreciating faster than equities and real estate—by a lot,” said Fair Winds Partners co-founder and Internet consultant Joshua Bourne. He said there’s growing attendance of venture capitalists and private equity companies at the auctions.
- ADVERTISEMENT -
Amid the digital land grab was Moniker-brokered Seniors.com, which bagged $1.8 million, and Lick.com, which went for $60,000. VintageMotorcycles.com attracted $14,000 and Jewishdeli.com snagged $9,000. But many of the highest-priced domain names are privately sold, such as last year’s big-ticket sales: Diamond.com and Vodka.com, which earned $7.5 million and $3 million, respectively.
And it appears a new record may be in the works. Business.com, which sold for a then-unprecedented $7.5 million in 1999, could sell again soon for as much as $400 million, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Yet the industry doesn’t seem to be flinching or recalling its institutional memories of last cycle’s digital crash. According to Moniker CEO Monte Cahn, approximately half of the buyers at the auctions purchases highly coveted domain names to build online businesses. The other half of the buyers uses the domain names as a platform for online advertising.
Domain name owners can make money from these so-called parked web pages by signing up for Google AdSense or Yahoo Search Marketing. These ad programs place links on web sites based on keywords chosen by the domain owners. Web site owners and Google or Yahoo then split the revenue generated when visitors to the sites click on the advertising links.
Verisign estimates that the average amount paid per user click on an online ad in the first quarter of 2007 was $1.46. Terms such as “home equity loan” bring in more than $24 per click.
And the industry stands to grow even more, said Mr. Bourne.
He added that the increasing use of the Internet by a greater number of people broadens the audience base for online ads. Mobile Internet users, a growing demographic, also see a greater percentage of online ads, since they often type web site names directly into their browsers, said Mr. Bourne.
Direct navigation—typing a URL into a browser—is the main way Internet users end up on a parked ad page. That’s because many Internet users frustrated by unsuccessful web searches key in generic names such as hotels.com, in hopes of finding a faster route to their desired search topics.
The finally tally from the recent Moniker auction may eventually double as the silent auction portion of the event, which ends June 27, is expected to bring in between $3 million and $10 million, said Mr. Cahn.
From http://www.redherring.com










