Unstoppable Domains โ€” AI Assistant

Sedo - GoDaddy - DNS Question

Spaceship Spaceship
Watch
Impact
0
Hi, I hope someone can answer this. I have a domain name ( twikibar.com ) that has been parked with Sedo Pro for abour a year now. I am getting 800 to 1000 visitors per day, with a 1% ctr. I decided to make twikibar into a web page of my own, and add Clickbank links, in hope of making more money. I created the web page with Go daddy's Web site tonight. I put a counter at the bottom of the page. The problem is....I only get 3 to 10 visitors a day. When I point it back to Sedo, it goes back to the 800 to 1000 per day. What does Sedo do or have in their DNS that Go daddy does not. I have moved this back and forth, and always the same result. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
 
0
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
AfternicAfternic
rh5918 said:
Hi, I hope someone can answer this. I have a domain name ( twikibar.com ) that has been parked with Sedo Pro for abour a year now. I am getting 800 to 1000 visitors per day, with a 1% ctr. I decided to make twikibar into a web page of my own, and add Clickbank links, in hope of making more money. I created the web page with Go daddy's Web site tonight. I put a counter at the bottom of the page. The problem is....I only get 3 to 10 visitors a day. When I point it back to Sedo, it goes back to the 800 to 1000 per day. What does Sedo do or have in their DNS that Go daddy does not. I have moved this back and forth, and always the same result. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.


Sedo is probably not filtering you're domain traffic, it must be bad traffic.... godaddy filters out
 
0
•••
It may be that sedo is counting page requests whereas Godaddy is counting unique visitors only.
 
0
•••
may be dns cache problem try 2-3 days with godaddy and see
 
0
•••
Dynadot โ€” .com TransferDynadot โ€” .com Transfer
Appraise.net
Domain Recover
DomainEasy โ€” Payment Flexibility
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the pageโ€™s height.
Back