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[Ad] How to Earn $109,220 in 1 year while saving on Domain Registration Fees

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Domain Cost Club

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The Video Explains how you can earn $109,220 in 1 year and save on domains using this program.​




Global Domains International is an ICANN Accredited Registrar since 1999 and has launched a revolutionary new program in October 2014 named "Domain Cost Club"

Domain Cost Club gives its Members 20% to 300% discount on domain names compared to the other domain registrars. Domain Cost Club gives huge price savings on new gtlds. Premium domains on the new gtlds are available for over 50% discount. This means you can save thousands of dollars on just 1 domain name alone but you have to be a member to request this.

In addition to the savings you make on your domain registration, You will earn 25$ to 200$ for each new member you bring to Domain Cost Club. This works to 7 levels so in time your income will grow exponentially.

If you and each of your referrals bring in just 2 members a month to Domain Cost Club, in 1 year, you can earn a residual income of $109,220 every year and more as your Domain Cost Club members keep increasing.

In the past decade, Global Domains International has had more than 2,000,000 affiliates (yes, that is 2 million not a typo) enrolled for their dot ws domains program using their multi level viral payout system and I have received my checks from them every month. So this is a solid company that has been in the business of sharing huge profits with their affiliates in the field of domain registration. And since it has just launched its domains at cost program through "Domain Cost Club", now is the best time to get in on this tremendous opportunity.

So Don't Wait, the sooner you join, the bigger your potential profits from Domain Cost Club will get.

See my site Domain Cost Club Information for more details on the program.

My Affiliate link to Domain Cost Club is http://domaincost.club/domaincc - Join under me to get 69$ worth of latest ebooks & reports on domain flipping and bonus material to help you become hugely successful.

 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Hi Friends,
As a domainer, not only do you want to get the best price on domain registrations, you need easy management of your domain names.

Domain Cost Club allows you to segregate your domains into different groups, and allows bulk whois contact changes and name server changes. The interface is simple, intuitive and fast.
Here is a screenshot of the bulk actions

bulkactions.png


Here is a screenshot of the Nameserver Options

changenameservers.png



And here is a screenshot for Editing a Zone when you use DCC Nameservers

zoneedit.png



Pretty neat and elegant isnt it.

Looks like these people understand exactly what domainers need and have provided a fast and easy interface to manage your domains.

Check out their cheap pricing and Hope to see you in my downline,

Please reply if you have any questions or comments, thanks.
 
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From PM's and requested by OP

m-i-k-e said:
I wouldn't trust my names at a registrar run on model that looks very much like a pyramid scheme. Eventually there will be no more buyers of memberships, the registrar will stop earning income and go under. All of the names at that registrar will be absolved by a different registrar that charges normal pricing and the people at the bottom of the pyramid scheme will have wasted somewhere between $100 and $500 dollars.

Domain Cost Club said:
Good Input,
That is how piramid schemes work, but this is not a piramid scheme.
They are not relying on future member payments to pay current members. They are not making a loss at any point. They make a profit from the member fees, out of 99$, 55$ is paid to upline and the remaining is taken by the company. The company does not make a profit from domain sales, but from selling memberships.

GDI has been following this business model from past 10 years and it is very solid, their old program is still working and I still get my checks from that program.

Your point is valid and I need to clarify this because other people may be having the same doubt, can I post your question in the thread ? Or better yet, you can post my reply there,
Thank You.
 
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Blessed to be under your Down line. I can copy and Duplicate your system to achieve success. Thank you
 
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Congratulations Suresh on joining Domain Cost Club.
If you or any others have any questions about Domain Cost Club, please post here,
Regards.
 
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Good Input,
That is how piramid schemes work, but this is not a piramid scheme.
They are not relying on future member payments to pay current members. They are not making a loss at any point. They make a profit from the member fees, out of 99$, 55$ is paid to upline and the remaining is taken by the company. The company does not make a profit from domain sales, but from selling memberships.

The whole business model is based on continuously selling memberships. This sounds like the classic MLM scheme with uplines and downlines.

What you say about not making a loss at any point simply is not true. If you sell domains at cost you are losing money without the cost of the membership. Businesses have overhead and expenses. You can't sustain a business by selling things at cost, so the fact is you need more memberships to sustain the company. Without membership sales the business will hit a dead end.

Brad
 
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From the perspective of someone who is well acquainted with large internet operations, I don't see significant monetary risk here. The costs associated with running a registrar are peanuts compared to what such a company could make from memberships alone. Think of it like Costco or BJ's. You pay a membership fee that allows the company to sell products and services at-cost, or near to it. As long as the company keeps additional costs to a minimum, those seemingly small membership fees add up fast.

When I was a kid, my mother and grandmother used to share a Costco membership. The price was $60/year, and they'd split the cost evenly. Costco didn't have a problem with it at long as it was no more than two people, and put the account in both names. That's basically what's happening here with the affiliate program, except Domain Cost Club gets to keep more money per person, allowing their domain prices to go even lower. For example:
  1. You sign up for $99.
  2. You refer two people. They each sign up for $99.
  3. You receive $50 for the referrals.
If this trend were to continue, we could see that Domain Cost Club is making a flat ~$75 per person with the cheapest plan--for the first month. After that, they make $100 each month. That is definitely a sustainable business.
 
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Eventually, the company is going to run out of people to sign up, given that the domaining community is so small. If this is a yearly membership fee, members will drop out once they discover that new memberships have dried up.

BJ's and Costco have broader consumer bases, and to be honest BJ's prices aren't all that cheaper than anyone else's, so BJ's is essentially making money from people stupid enough to pay to shop somewhere. Also, these companies don't promise members bonuses for each person they refer (except, perhaps, as an occasional promotion).

But go ahead and invest.

It still looks like a pyramid scheme.
 
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@Ms Domainer, did you look at the prices? The lowest plan is monthly. The referral payout for that plan appears to be half the price of the first month. Kindly explain how that doesn't yield a profit. It could be annual and they'd still come out in the green. Am I missing something somewhere?

Edit: Okay, I see where the confusion is. Let me clarify: Only the first level in the matrix receives a $25 payout for a monthly membership referral. Here, I'll quote the relevant section:

If you refer a $99 Standard Member, $55 is paid to you and your network. You're paid a $20 premium bounty plus $5 in yearly commission — that's $25 for each referral. Another $30 in commission is paid out to your network at $5 per level. Bounties are a one-time payment, while commissions are recurring income because they're paid on both new memberships and renewals.

If you refer a Charter Member for a one-time purchase of $499, $320 is paid out to you and your network. You're paid a $180 premium bounty plus $20 in commission — that's $200 for referring a single Charter Member! Another $120 is paid out to your network.

It's still a fixed-price commission for the entire network. With the monthly plan, there's an immediate $44 profit, and each additional month is pure profit, minus a $5 payout each year for continued membership. With the lifetime plan, they make a flat $79 profit, which is plenty to cover costs for quite a few years. Registrar costs don't significantly increase with additional members/domains.

This is actually less risky than many registrar affiliate programs, which initially take a loss, or significantly delay payout to avoid loss.

I think it's worth noting that the idea here seems to be to get cheap domains, not necessarily to make money from affiliate marketing/MLM. That's just to help them grow faster.

Note: The prices listed don't seem to include the ICANN fees, which of course have to be included in the final cost per domain.
 
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It is not a ponzi or pyramid, it is a simple MLM business.. But I would still never put any of my most valuable names into such a registrar.. If you are doing many hand regs then this could be good for you, but I don't see putting an LLL.com or an LL.com there..
 
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TheDomains covered them

An article with an embedded affiliate link is not exactly an objective source...

In any case, why are they pinning a piece of commercial advertising on here as if it's a regular post?
 
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Please note that this is a paid sticky ad. The quote of jb lions is for non-paid ads. The forum has paid ad spots to help cover server, maint., and other costs.

Thanks for understanding. Please keep the thread ontopic. :)
 
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So, big savings on gTLDs that most domainers are shying away from. I guess those who take a risk on gTLDs are a good fit for taking a risk with this.

There are risks involved with your choice of registrar - primarily security, and the potential inability to use/transfer/sell your domain.

Their .com price is $7.85, and you pay $99/yr to get that price. That is a great price, but you need to compare it with the GoDaddy DDC price of $8.29 available from a $60/yr or so membership (using a coupon).

To start saving money (compared to GoDaddy DDC) you would need to buy/renew 80 or so domains each year. If you had 1000 domains, the savings would be roughly $450. Perhaps not enough to sway a professional domainer.

THEIR BUSINESS MODEL

The business gets $45 from every $99/yr membership. The rest gets distributed to affiliates some way or other.

YES IT DOES WORK

They are basically offering the same deal as GoDaddy (which has $90/yr - full price - to get $8.29 domains), but they are receiving $45 a year for $7.85 domains. So to be profitable they need to not spend $$$ on things that GoDaddy does. No advertising. Not as much support. And what else??

ULTIMATELY

Unless you know the various costs faced by a registrar - programming, hosting, security, support, offices, regulatory fees - and unless you know where Domain Cost Club is cutting corners, you can't tell if it is sustainable. But their previous business did go the distance...

We are in an industry where many business promise much, and disappear, leaving customers out of pocket.

REMEMBER REGISTERFLY??

Run by a gay couple who fell out, it was a top 10 registrar, and all fell to pieces:

In February 2007 eNom formally severed ties with RegisterFly over continued consumer complaints. John Naruszewicz, a co-owner of RegisterFly, filed suit against his business partner, CEO Kevin Medina (they each were thought to have owned 50% of the company). Medina was fired by RegisterFly, reportedly over civil liabilities relating to allegations of funds mismanagement but Medina and Naruszewicz continued to dispute legal control over the company. Meanwhile RegisterFly filed suit against Kevin Medina, alleging he had stolen company funds for a $27,000 male escort service, a $6,000 liposuction procedure, a $10,000/month penthouse apartment in Miami, Florida and a $6,000 chihuahua dog. This alleged misappropriation of funds, along with Medina's lavish spending, was said to have caused the company's woes. Court documents claim over 75,000 customer domain names were forfeited by RegisterFly.com in one month alone because of the company's failure to pay registration fees. RegisterFly management also claimed that Medina deleted passwords and access to billing system information to prevent the issuing of customer refunds.However, Medina reportedly accused his ex-lover Naruzewicz of spending $60,000 in company funds on Moroccan furniture for the Corporate office
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RegisterFly

There's nothing to suggest that Domain Cost Club will be anything like that, I'm just showing how you never know what is going on behind the scenes.

THE PARENT COMPANY

http://www.globaldomainsint.ws/

In business for a long time, and while these aren't deal breakers, in my experience when a business hasn't updated their website design since the day they arrived 6 years ago (and it was dated then!)
https://web.archive.org/web/20080718114234/http://globaldomainsint.ws/

and the copyright in the footer says 2012

and they have a links page!
http://www.globaldomainsint.ws/Links.html
with only one link!

and their domain has private registration, and expires in 3 weeks
and strangely their new domain, domaincost.club, is registered to the email address:
[email protected]

Odd!

Too many red flags and risk for limited savings for me. Although I do sense that this is a legit and honest business that has come up with a unique angle.



 
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Hi SearchEngineZ,

Thanks for sharing your concerns, let me address them here.
Note that I am an affiliate of Domain Cost Club and I do not represent DCC in official capacity.

The website you have mentioned http://www.globaldomainsint.ws/ is built by an affiliate of Global Domains International. It is not maintained by GDI.

There are over over 2,000,000 affiliates and customers who have joined GDI over the past decade and this program is still going strong, I have received my commission checks every month from GDI. Domain Cost Club is a new Expansion of GDI. My gdi domain for which I pay 10$ every month is http://mufa.ws - I have kept the default site and not customized it or changed the nameservers to point to a different host.

The official GDI site is http://website.ws
Also affiliates are given other replicated sites that they may promote like http://freedom.ws/wsbiz or http://my.ws/wsbiz - note that these have my affiliate id.

So the red flags you have seen are based on the incorrect site, check out the sites I have mentioned and then if you still have any concerns I can address those too.

Just as the site I have built to promote Domain Cost Club is http://domainscostclub.com - that is not the official dcc site. The official Dcc site is http://domaincost.club/domaincc and that has my affiliate id in it.

I have already saved more than the 499$ that I paid for DCC lifetime charter membership on just one single domain http://creditcard.website - this premium domain was being quoted in the thousands at godaddy but I got it from DCC at less than half that price. In addition to the savings, I have already earned 4 figure income from DCC mainly from spillover from my up-line.
I have also registered these other domains with DCC

workathome.website
fatloss.website
hostingfor.website
howtogeta.website
booty.city
equity.city
lusty.city
nudity.city
quality.city
spiritual.city
tasty.city
unity.city
vitality.city

This is to show that I fully trust DCC with my domains,
Please reply if you or any one else have any other concerns or suggestions,
Regards,
Mufad.
 
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-edited out-
 
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Yes Jb Lions,
I purchased the forum ad and joined Namepros with the sole intention of sharing Domain Cost Club with others who are interested in saving and earning like I am,
I did not want to promote myself, just the domain cost club opportunity, so that is why I selected the username Domain Cost Club, do you feel that is a bad idea ?
DCC allows its affiliates to promote it in legal methods, that is why DCC can keep its cost low, affiliates like me can invest in advertising and gain from profits when others join from my affiliate link, the same opportunity is available to anyone who joins DCC ! That is what I love about this opportunity, anyone can earn good income by referring others, if you want to join just for the savings on the domain names, then that is fine too.

The s at the end of domaincostclub.com is not my site, it belongs to another affiliate. My s is between domain and cost so yes you will have many affiliates promoting DCC as it grows, that is why now is the best time to get in on this opportunity at the top, or you can wait an watch it grow and later on hop on when you are sure it is stable and profitable.
Regards,
Mufad.
 
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I did not want to promote myself, just the domain cost club opportunity, so that is why I selected the username Domain Cost Club, do you feel that is a bad idea ?

I feel it is a bad idea. By using the forum name any reasonable person would assume you are a direct representative of the company, not an affiliate.

Brad
 
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The website you have mentioned http://www.globaldomainsint.ws/ is built by an affiliate of Global Domains International. It is not maintained by GDI.​

My bad - still, they should control the use of their company name a bit better! And they should link to their parent company website rather than me having to search for it.

99% of businesses with affiliate programs forbid the use of their brand in the domain of affiliates - that way this sort of confusion, including the confusion around your relationship with them, can be avoided.

Imagine if an eBay affiliate ran a site at OfficialEBay.com ??

As I said, no doubting the savings to be made if you were buying .website domains etc. I would be using it. I just don't think many domainers are going for these new gTLDs.
 
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Hi Friends,
Here is a recorded Webinar with the founder Alan Ezeir, posted by one of my team members,
He talks about the new gtlds and the estimated numbers, bonus and about the company,
Regards,
Mufad.
 
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