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question What is holding back demand for NewG's?

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What is holding back demand for NewG's?

Is it lack of end user education? Premium renewals? The ability for renewal prices to skyrocket with no price controls? Something else?

NewG's have been out for a half decade now, yet they still have very little demand. The amount of sales by both monetary and volume metrics show there is little demand.

So what gives? What is holding back the demand for NewG's in mid 2019?

(Disclaimer: I am pro-NewG and own a few. I own enough, not to change a lifestyle, but to gain a better understanding.)
 
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.US domains.US domains
the brand king always wins....think crypto....
there are over 1500 coins at this point and some have been around 4 years now....why is bitcoin still 60% of the market and the almost the only coin people have heard of.
Same with .com.... most people dont know about Gtlds and large companies always seem to puchase their .com once they have the money. according to this
https://hackernoon.com/how-i-ended-...ins-and-found-this-shocking-fact-baa2cd8096f9
38% of .xyz are listed for resale.
i consolidated most of my coins into btc and I continue to spend good money on good names in King and when I launch a biz I always use king. Im comfortable investing in the King.

never bet against the power of perception. there is a reason we call it KING!
 
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Not sure what you mean but it is simple yeah.
The problem with those articles is that the journalists rarely understand the domain name business or domaining. They don't know what is valuable and what is not. They don't know which new gTLD is doing well and which is not. Grouping all new gTLDs as a single TLD is not a good thing to do. Some of them are doing well and some of them are on not. The Chinese market is also very different to the domain name markets in the rest of the world.

Regards...jmcc
 
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Many such posters usually don't have any practice even here on NamePros... just their own theories and fantasies...
 
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The problem with those articles is that the journalists rarely understand the domain name business or domaining. They don't know what is valuable and what is not. They don't know which new gTLD is doing well and which is not. Grouping all new gTLDs as a single TLD is not a good thing to do. Some of them are doing well and some of them are on not. The Chinese market is also very different to the domain name markets in the rest of the world.

Regards...jmcc
The fact that random extentions are doing well isn’t relevant to the common flaws they all have referenced in the articles I don’t think you read. It’s just a fact .coms are what work best universally, are the most secure, are the most trusted, have the smoothest connection, I mean any one of these is reason enough
 
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The fact that random extentions are doing well isn’t relevant to the common flaws they all have referenced in the articles I don’t think you read.
I do read them and almost invariably the journalists don't understand domain names or the domain name business. Journalists basically concentrate on the top NGTs by volume (TOP/XYZ/LOAN/CLUB etc) and ten extrapolate all their issues to other NGTs. The problem is that the most of the top NGTs are using discounting to drive registrations. Discounted regisrations do not renew well if at all. The new registry management for the old Famous Four Media NGTs (LOAN etc) increased the whole sale fee for domain names last year. The numbers of new registrations in some of these TLDs collapsed from tens of thousands per month to around a hundred per month. The .LOAN is currently in free-fall and will be lucky to make it out of 2019 with approximately 20K registrations. There are some on-topic loan websites in the .LOAN NGT but they are vastly outnumbered by adult affiliate landers and gambling landers.

Some of the other NGTs that haven't used discounting have had better results on renewals. The higher the registration fee, the better the renewal rate. Discounting lowers the renewal rates. When a TLD gets beyond its first few years of operations, it depends more on renewals than new registrations for the bulk of the registry's revenue. Discounting also damages the credibility of a TLD because it attracts dodgy registrations and low quality websites.

It’s just a fact .coms are what work best universally, are the most secure, are the most trusted, have the smoothest connection, I mean any one of these is reason enough
The .COM is still the global TLD but in countries outside the US with a strong local ccTLD, the .COM is the second choice TLD.

Regards...jmcc
 
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Already 10 years I live from domaining only by selling non-.com domains...
What I'm doing wrong???

Everyone sells a lot of non-.COMs (.NET/.ORG, ccTLDs, etc.) but we're referring specifically to new gTLDs.

If you are making a living income reselling these, then good show, but you are in a very tiny minority.
 
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we're referring specifically to new gTLDs.
As of today I sold 12 of them (nTLDs) inbound.
$1K+ per domain on average.
All are standard handregs.
 
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And all within 1st year.
 
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But what are your "purchase + renewal" expenses on your entire new gTLD portfolio?
 
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My expenses are ~3 times below income.
 
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Then with that kind of luck you should be buying lottery tickets, not new gTLDs.
 
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It is not a kind of luck...
I'm a domainer, I'm not a gambler...
I know and understand what I'm doing... it is based on my efforts, skills and experience... and even on IQ level.
 
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All of life is 50% hard work/skill and 50% luck/right place-right time, so if you're making a living selling new gTLDs, then that back-half is really pumping for you.

I meant no disrespect, as you still need that first half to make it all work.
 
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As usual, l have no idea what a spire domaining term means—in this case, New
What is holding back demand for NewG's?

Is it lack of end user education? Premium renewals? The ability for renewal prices to skyrocket with no price controls? Something else?

NewG's have been out for a half decade now, yet they still have very little demand. The amount of sales by both monetary and volume metrics show there is little demand.

So what gives? What is holding back the demand for NewG's in mid 2019?

(Disclaimer: I am pro-NewG and own a few. I own enough, not to change a lifestyle, but to gain a better understanding.)

As usual, l have no idea what a pure domaining term means—in this case NewG, and the post-er doesn’t provide an example.

Yes, l have a zillion stars next to my pic, but I’m a relative newcomer to domaining, as after signing on to NamePros about a dozen years ago, l went on a lengthy sabbatical to help raise a family—and returned to NamePros several months ago.

Oh well, as l tell the students l teach English to, “Show Don’t Tell”! In other words, provide specific examples instead of merely generalizing.

Thanks to all of you members who realize neophytes will be reading your messages!
 
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As usual, l have no idea what a spire domaining term means—in this case, New


As usual, l have no idea what a pure domaining term means—in this case NewG, and the post-er doesn’t provide an example.

Yes, l have a zillion stars next to my pic, but I’m a relative newcomer to domaining, as after signing on to NamePros about a dozen years ago, l went on a lengthy sabbatical to help raise a family—and returned to NamePros several months ago.

Oh well, as l tell the students l teach English to, “Show Don’t Tell”! In other words, provide specific examples instead of merely generalizing.

Thanks to all of you members who realize neophytes will be reading your messages!
Can you please provide an example of exactly what you don't understand?...... Instead of generalizing....Do you not understand a term mentioned? The context?
 
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@Lewstar NewG, nGTLD, new G', gTLD are all just in reference to the new domain extension invasion from 2013 onwards.. for example:

.xxx
.kitchen
.gripe
.car
.suck

and over a thousand more, many of which are practically useless, and more to come. The acronym "gTLD" stands for Generic Top-Level Domain. Although technically if we just use gTLD without being prefaced by "new" it may also encompass the legacy extensions as well, .coms and .nets etc., because they are also generic. It is the "New" or the "N" that separates the invaders from the established settlements.
 
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