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Look
out! The new domains are coming! "Dot-biz is going to be the
next coming of dot-com," I recently read in an article in the
Denver Post. The buzz has begun. Seven new top-level domains have
been approved by ICANN, the organization that governs domains, and
could be available as early as spring of this year. The new domains
approved are .biz, .info, .aero, .coop, .musuem, .pro, and .name.
Pre-registration sites like, PreRegisterYourDomains.com, already
have begun taking applications claiming "3 million domain names
will be registered in the first five minutes." That same Denver
Post article later says If predictions from analysts hold true
- that dot-biz will rival the popularity of dot-com - startups will
no longer have to settle for second-tier domain names. Hogwash!
- To put it gently. Dot-com will always be the supreme ruler of
all domain names. Heres why:
Word
Association. Ask anyone the first three words that come to mind
when you say Internet and one will almost always be dot-com
along with Web or surfing. Dot-com is forever chiseled into
our brain directly associated with the Internet.
Old
habits die hard. The new domains will confuse the average everyday
Web surfer. With so many suffixes it will be harder to find the
information they are looking for. Out of frustration they will,
most likely, resort to the old standby, dot-com.
Marketing.
Big businesses like IBM and Microsoft have already spent billions
promoting their dot-coms in print, and media advertising. Is Microsoft
going to switch to promoting Microsoft.biz instead of Microsoft.com?
This is highly unlikely.
Brand
Protection. The same people who own the corresponding dot-com will
most likely buy up most of the dot-biz (said to be restricted to
business only) and dot-info (open to anyone) to protect their valuable
brand. Someone with fishland.com is not going to want someone else
to own fishland.biz and fishland.info. The real winners here are
the lawyers, who should be kept busy for years with trademark infringement
suits.
Meaning.
None of the new top-level domains meanings are as elegant or as
classy as the dot-com, which can mean communication or commercial.
Dot-biz obviously stands for business, but it sounds slangy and
it also happens to mean sh** in the United Kingdom. Information,
the meaning of dot-info, would be perfect if it was restricted to
sites with a high concentration of information about a certain topic,
but its not. This domain is unrestricted, and can be registered
by anyone. Surfers will quickly lose trust that all dot-info sites
actually contain quality information. Dot-pro and Dot-name will
be effective but on a limited level. To register a dot-pro you must
prove you are a professional on the topic in the domain name.
Dot-name will be for individuals name only (good luck to all the
John Smiths out there.)
Appeal.
Sure the new TLDs, especially dot-biz, will make it easier for
smaller companies to get a Web address that fits their business.
But will it be as appealing as a dot-com? Those businesses that
have a dot-biz domain may seem to be in a different class than the
dot-com and it may be harder for them to compete. It may be worth
it for them to invest more money in a dot-com domain that be stuck
with a dot-biz. Even with the recent doom of a few dot-com companies,
there are many that are still going strong and they continue to
breathe life into the dot-com world. The only new TLD applicant
that might have been able to rival the dot-com for appeal was dot-Web.
Unfortunately the application for dot-Web was not approved by ICANN.
Bottom
Line- Dot-com is established and respected. It has the distinction
of being one of the first domain names of the new Internet frontier
and the most sought after. The new domains will make it easier to
get a home on the Web and will have their place in the city of Internet.
But Dot-com will always be the beautiful white mansion up on the
hill with the brand new Ferrari out front.
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