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Is Domain Parking Worth the Trouble?

Friday Nov 14, 2008
domain parking
Patrick Roberts asked:


If you’re thinking about getting into the domain parking industry then I’ll let you in on a little secret: The odds are stacked against you. This business has been dominated by a few big players for a while. If you’re starting from scratch, then you have as much chance to succeed in this game as a Tibetan monk with violent garlic allergies has at establishing himself as a dominant player in the Italian Mafia.

The domain parking industry is fundamentally flawed because it is passive. Any business plan that involves a lot of sitting around must eventually fail. It’s similar to any get-rich-quick scam that uses the phrase, “Just sit back and watch the money roll in!” I’ve heard countless eCommerce, Adsense and affiliate schemes that make this claim. They will tell you to have faith in their system, they will warn against doubters who want to steal your get-rich-quick dreams away from you. But I tell you: Don′t buy into anything that says, “Pay me $99.95 and I’ll tell you the secret to making money without having to work.”

Obviously some people make a living in the domain parking industry. I will tell you how they do it. First of all they have tons of awesome domains such as gardens.com or love.com. They do not depend on domains such as “ilikegardensalot.com” or “ireallylikelovealot.com.” Any domain with two or more words will probably never make back the money you spent to register it.

Be wary of buying domains that seem clever right now because they probably suck. You will discover this after it’s too late to cancel your domain choices and get a refund. It doesn′t even matter if you and all your friends think your domain names are clever. What matters is what the general masses think is clever.

Keep in mind that you need people to type your domain names manually. Search engines won′t help you because they hesitate to even acknowledge your parked pages. So you have to ask yourself honestly, “What are the chances of someone typing in ireallyreallylikegardensalot.com?” In order for your domain, ireallyreallylikegardensalot.com to pay for itself an average of one hundred separate people will have to type that entire domain every day.

You might try buying thousands of dollars worth of domains in hopes that they make more than what it cost to register them in the first place. If you purchased a domain from scratch that made $5 dollars more than what it cost you to register it per year, that would be a miracle. So what if you could find 10,000 similarly miraculous domains? Then you would have an administrative nightmare on your hands.

Another option is to purchase domains that are already popular. Suppose you bought a kick-ass domain for $20000. Suppose this domain was so awesome that it made you $1000 dollars per year on cash parking. How long will it take for this domain to pay for itself at that rate? 20 years.

Try to maintain a shrewd, business mindset. What’s the payoff here? What’s the timeframe before this investment starts to make a return above its original cost? Will the internet still exist by then?

There are a few domain parking companies that will do you right, such as NameDrive.com, Sedo.com or Godaddy.com. I am currently with Godaddy.com, making an average of 15 cents per click, which is unbeatable as far as I’ve seen. At this rate, I only need 10,000 clicks to break even. I’ve spent weeks’ worth of income and months’ worth of brainstorming energy to come this conclusion about domain parking: It’s not worth it.

by Patrick Roberts www.BooksByPatrick.com

Earn Big Profits From Domain Names


Domain TLD and Trademark Myths

Sunday Jul 27, 2008
domain parking
Chris Mcelroy Aka Namecritic asked:


I started buying and selling domain names in 1995. Domain speculation began sometime in 1994. I did appraisals and was one of the biggest advocates for registering generic domain names rather than made-up names or those that violated trademarks.

I made a good income from my domains because I did not just sell domain names, I sold domain names that had a business plan and a website while others were just trying to sell their domain names with no traffic, no business plan and no website.

Today many are still doing it that way. Although now they park them at SEDO or Go Daddy or somewhere to try to make adsense revenue while they list them for sale. So my background in domain names is good enough that I can dispel a few myths.

First TLD stands for Top Level Domain. .COM, .NET, .ORG are all examples of TLDs. The domain name most people refer to is what goes before the dot. The TLD is what comes after the dot.

These are some Common Myths about Domain Names;

.TV is for television or multimedia websites. Pure myth. Any domain name in any TLD can work for television, video, or multimedia. The TLD .TV does not give you any special tools for creating multimedia-rich content. .TV does not stand for television. It is the ccTLD or country-code TLD for Tuvalu Island. An island in the pacific that had no real use for owning a TLD so they sold the rights to sell domain names on their TLD to a company that leads people to believe it stands for television. It works. People buy them and use them and associate them with television and that is ok. It’s just a myth that .TV was created to mean television.

Another Domain Name Myth: If you want to build websites that people can access by their cell phone or PDA you need to get a .MOBI domain name. Just like dot tv does not give you any special capability for television or multimedia, dot mobi does not give you any special tools for mobile-capable websites. Any website on any TLD can provide content to cell phones and PDAs if it is made compatible for them. Many will lead you to believe that dot mobi somehow gives you the advantage when it comes to cell phones and PDAs. it doesn’t.

.ME Domain Names Myth: Coming soon to a domain registrar near you. Soon domain names will be marketing for the TLD dot ME. They will market them as great domain names for personal websites. They may be. But it was not created as such. It is the Country-code top-level domain designated for Montenegro.

.PN Domain Names: I own Blogs.pn. I would love to tell you it stands for Publisher network or something like that but it doesn’t. It is the Country-code top-level domain designated for Pitcairn Island. Another pacific island that did not have much use for a TLD so someone was authorized to sell dot pn domain names.

Soon ICANN will be allowing more TLDs to be created and domain names will be marketed in these new TLDs. More and more countries will also offer domain names for sale in their ccTLDs. So the market will be opening up and it may be confusing to some. The truth is what comes before the dot matters most. Getting a domain name in a TLD that makes sense to users can help you though.

Shorter Domain Names are better than Long Domain Names Myth: Only in certain circumstances is a shorter domain name better than a long domain name. Many domain gurus disagree. I don’t care. They talk about people being able to remember your domain name. Truthfully more traffic comes from people clicking links in search engines, on other websites, and on social bookmarking sites than comes from people who type in the domain name.

What is more important is that the domain name help you capture a phrase you want to target in the search engines. I can give you a ton of examples where having the exact phrase you want in the domain name has helped get a top position in Google and other search engines. So if the phrase is longer, do not abbreviate it just because you heard shorter domain names are better. Get the phrase you want to target.

If you are planning to advertise your domain name OFFLINE, in advertising on TV, radio, or even magazines and newspapers, shorter domain names ARE better. Offline, people have to be able to remember your domain name.

The best of both worlds: If most of your traffic comes from the web, shorter means very little. To cover both, get a domain name that matches your key phrase and put your website on that domain name. Then get a second domain name that is short and catchy and redirect or point it to the same website. Use the shorter-easy-to-remember domain name for your offline marketing and the domain that matches your key phrase for the search engines.

Anything other than a dot COM is worthless Myth: This is a favorite myth spread everywhere. It is based on the same myths about shorter domain names. If people have to remember it, then yes, they do remember dot com more often. If you are doing offline marketing, use a dot com.

Online your website can be on any TLD. People are clicking links. So again, get the domain name that matches your key phrase for your website whether it is on .com, net, org, tv, pn, cc, ws, or whatever. Start with dot com, try your phrase. If it is taken, move to the next TLD and try your phrase again. If it is taken, repeat your attempts to register until you find a TLD that your phrase IS available in and register it in that TLD.

These are some Myths about Trademarks and Domain Names;

Domain Name VS Trademark Myth #1: If I own a trademark I need to register my trademarked name in every TLD. Pure Myth and a worthless, time-consuming strategy promoted by Intellectual Property Lawyers who need to justify what you are paying them.

Domain Name VS Trademark Myth #2: When you register a trademark, you have to choose a classification for that trademark such as “entertainment television”, “clothing and apparel”, “beverages”, etc.

You do not own the phrase you trademark. You are being allowed to use that trademark in commerce within the classification you chose. Someone else can register the same exact trademark and choose a different classification.

In addition to that, the geographical area you registered your mark in only covers that area. Someone could have the same trademark in the same classification in a different geographical location.

So again, you do not own the phrase you trademarked, so no need to register every TLD in existence. It could even be construed as anti-competitive business practice to do so.

Domain Name VS Trademark Myth #3: If you chose the trademark, “goofball lawyer stuff″ and chose the classification “clothing and apparel”, I could still register the domain name http://goofballlawyerstuff.com or net or org or whatever.

As long as I do not sell clothing or apparel, link to anyone who sells clothing and apparel, or try to confuse people into believing my website is owned by you, I have not violated your trademark rights. Get over it.

I hope this helps you dispel a few of the most common domain name and trademark myths you may have been reading about.

Secret Affiliate Code


Turning Your Expired Domain Into a Profit Making Machine-domain Parking Ideas

Wednesday Jul 23, 2008
domain parking
John Khu asked:


It is so common to see a registrar’s parking page cropping up in your browser window, when you type in a domain name to check what is on the site. In fact, it could be a sheer wastage of what is possibly a good expired domain name! Like you, thousands of others would have typed the same expired domain name on the browser window just to see what is inside! A typical expired domain does not have any system that can measure and track the actual number of site visitors. A typical expired domain displays no life in its present avatar. But, remember that it had an active life in its previous incarnation. Many people who were the regular visitors of that web site will still be looking for it even now. With these assured visitors to your expired domain, do you have a good mechanism that has the ability to bring you a sizeable amount of income?

Domain parking is possibly the best known method of earning income with your expired domains. In fact, it is the first step for a novice expired domain trader to taste small income before he or she can stride forward to find ways of making more income with a range of expired domains. Domain parking is a cool and efficient tool that you can use to make your first income in the expired domain trading business.

Domain parking is an efficient profit making machine that exposes your expired domain to a number of income making opportunities. Domain parking is simple money making process that redirects your expired domain to any other pages of a live web site. Domain parking service providing firms provide you a basic web page that includes a number of advertising banners and logos. Basically, the allotted web page assigned to your expired domain acts as a repository of links and banners that represent a number of other web sites. When a visitor visits your parked page either by accident or with an intention, he or she will see a number of links on which they can link to navigate to their preferred web sites.

The income making system is just simple. For every productive click that your visitors make, the advertiser will pay a certain portion of income to the domain parking firm. As the legal owner of the expired domain, you will also gain in the form of a small share of income. Though this income is small in value, you can still make a large sum by parking your collection of expired domains with a number of parking firms.

Domain redirection is yet another good service that you can use your expired domain name to make online income. Now, most of the domain registration companies offer this service as a part of the cost of registration or as an additional service with a small fee. Some firms may offer this service free of charge to develop their own business interests. Domain redirection services are always tied up with an affiliate program. An affiliate program is a unique program when the service provider agrees to pay you a small fee for your referring assistance which leads customers to affiliate web sites. Commissions are payable in three different forms: pay-per-click, pay-per-sale, or pay-per-lead.

The Domain Secrets Book


Using Domains Expired to Make Online Profits

Saturday Jul 19, 2008
domain parking
John Khu asked:


Good and novelty domain names could be a great asset for you, when you consider their immense commercial value and perceived online utility. When the internet appeared first time, almost year’s back, no one knew the potential value of domain names. With each passing day and as the concept of internet grew up down the years, people started identifying the potential money making values of good domains. With the impeding dot com bubble burst, several millions of domain names suddenly became orphaned and lonely over the wide expanse on internet. This was the unfortunate time when millions of net entrepreneurs lost everything they had, and they did not even have enough money to renew those domain names.

However, there were a fortunate lot of intelligent people, who anticipated and visualized the future prospects of holding all these domains expired. Soon, there was a new trend of people, who were racing against time to grab and buy domain expired. A new form of business took its birth, when intelligent domain name traders gobbled up millions of domains expired within days and months.

Why did they purchase such a huge number of domains expired? What were the real reasons? It seems that with the stabilization of internet and net business opportunities, new and enthusiastic people are looking for a good and old expired domain, so that they can use it for developing meaningful web sites. Secondly, trading in domains expired provides unlimited wealth and online riches to people within the shortest possible time.

Right now, people understand and perceive the commercial importance of buying very good domains expired. With a sustained rush for domain names, everyone is trying to test the waters to make some money online. As of now, the demand for good expired domain names is slowly increasing. A good domain name expired can cost you well under $100 to buy and register. But, it is possible to sell the same domain for an amount as high as $300, provided you sell it an auction process.

If you have a series of domains expired at your disposal, you can earn some decent income by using the power of expired domain names. One of the best ways to earn a simple income is to sell it straightaway to an interested buyer. But, with this option, you may not really earn a large income. So, you will need to devise a strategy that will provide you an opportunity to earn more income. One of the most preferred ways of earning small incomes by using domains expired, is to park it with a parking service. Parking service provides you a facility, where you can create a simple web page to host your expired domain name. When online surfers click on your page, they will navigate to other useful web site that can provide very good services, sell excellent products or provide useful online information. For very successful click, you can earn a small income and when pooled, this can be a very big source of income to you.

Other simple methods include registering your domains expired with convenient PPC and affiliate engines that provide a tiny share of income that arises out of successful sales or clicks. You can also use a good expired domain name to build a web site, develop it with good content and later sell them at premium rates to any interested parties. These are some of the simple methods that allow you to use the hidden power of domains expired to make a large pool of income. If you are careful enough in using your expired domains, you can earn a hefty profit and a sustained residual form of income.



How I Sell My Domain Names


Expired Domain Traffic-is it a Bane or Boon?

Thursday Jul 3, 2008
domain parking
John Khu asked:


There are two or three different classes of expired domain traders and they always look for different things when buying their preferred expired domain names. What one works for a domain trader may not really work for others! One class of traders may choose and buy names for future web site development, while the second class of traders make it a point to buy an expired domain name with a specific future customer in mind. However, there is a third group of traders, who consistently buy expired domains with plenty of expired domain traffic or expired traffic. These traders value expired traffic immensely and for them, an expired domain with plenty of expired traffic is a god-sent opportunity and a great money making option.

Traders buy expired domains just for their expired traffic and they park their domains at highly lucrative places that provide them an opportunity to earn some form of income. These domains parked on web portals like Sedo ensures an ongoing income just enough to sustain the cost of maintaining the expired domain. Domains that come with considerable amount of expired traffic are always premium and costly given their immense commercial value and importance.

Now, the most important and critical question is how can one find an expired domain with plenty of expired traffic? Right now, there are just a few methods that will help you to find the amount of traffic. But, you can be assured of its traffic, once you find an expired domain and track the traffic statistics over that domain. Most of the traffic associated with a given expired domain could be useless and commercially unviable. Some amount of traffic can come from either links or type-ins. For example, absolutelyenhanted.com is not that sort of domain that a person will automatically type on the browser window. However, this type of domains could have a substantial amount of traffic associated with it. You can use a convenient tool that will allow you to find out how many links a well known web portal like Alexa.com shows, to see if the domain still has a traffic ranking, or you can alternatively use PageRank.net to see, if the domain has a Google PageRank or not.

However, you should be extremely cautious, while buying an expired domain exclusively for expired domain traffic. In many cases, people like you may be just trying to see, if the domain you are trying to buy has an established expired traffic. This type of traffic is not the real traffic and search engine may never recognize this traffic. Again, if the expired domain that you buy has a number of traffic it does not mean that the traffic is real. May be the links point to dead sites or to a place where no one ever visits.

Thus, to identify whether an expired domain has a verifiable source of traffic or not is actually quite difficult. You will also need to try and use a number of tools and utilities to verify the expired domain and its expired traffic.



Bulk & Group Email Marketing Software


Domain Optimizing - Increase Domain Wealth

Friday Jun 27, 2008
domain parking
Raaj Kalappurakal asked:


Many domainers easily give up on their domain wealth quest after a few months. This happens due to a low CTR (Click Through Rate) or domain keywords that pay pennies which even when totalled over a month makes little change. Many of us then start blaming the parking company domain page landers or try to lay the blame game on other factors.

Not that I never did, but then, when you take some time to contemplate the problem at hand, you realize that parking companies themselves have their own limitations to help monetize a site. They cannot offer you the ability to create complete websites full of content. Although these days many domain parking services are trying to introduce content packed parking page landers. However, in many cases, the parking company feed provider itself doesn’t wish a parked page to have anything more than the actual advertisements.

We have to remember that these are parked pages, with the sole intention of grabbing the visitors attention and a quick end goal of a click through. These aren’t websites which can hold a visitors interest for a longer time. Keeping this in mind, to win, we have to work within the limitations of a parked page customization options.

Today, many parked pages “ARE” indexed by search engines. So lets learn to quickly make the most of what we have in hand and try to improve CTR’s and revenues.Here are a few vital domain parking tips that can help your parking page lander get the maximum click through by visitors.

1. Be sure to use the title tags.

Your title tag should urge a visitor to execute an action. Words like NOW, DISCOUNTS, HOT OFFERS, NEW, UNIQUE, SAVE etc are attention grabbing keywords that exhort people to action. Use your title tags to maximum benefit. Also, don’t make it too long! Something like, “Save More On Auto Insurance Now!” is long enough.

2. Use meta description tags to add relevant keyword rich descriptions. Remember, every word counts because you have a few lines to make it attention grabbing. Don’t write long meaningless descriptions. A description like ” Explore Super Low Rates on Car Insurance. Choose from Proven Auto Insurance Rate Quotes. Save Bigger on Your Car Insurance Now.” is pretty much what a person looking for cheaper car insurance wants to hear.

3. Your domain landing page colors “ARE” important. Take time to change colors and make your site easy on the eyes. Colors like blue add a touch of professionalism to a webpage. You honestly don’t want your visitor looking for health insurance land on a page that is blazing red colors. However, you might use red color on a sports car site.. It’s all about your keyword, your target audience and age demographics. When in doubt, always stick to the 16 web safe colors.

Keeping these points in mind is the first step to making your domains work for you. Wishing you all the luck in creating bigger domain wealth.

Expired Domain Secret


Making Money With Parking Domain Services

Friday Jun 13, 2008
domain parking
Matthew Bredel asked:


Have you thought of using domain parking to make some money? This is something that many people are taking advantage of. There are several ways you can make money with the simple task of domain parking.

Some people park a domain and decide to use it to make money while they are working out how to build the site. This is a great way to earn while you plan the site out. Some people also park domains just for the purpose of making money with no further plans to develop the website.

How do you do domain parking?

First of all, you need to know what type of domain to park. If you can think of an up and coming idea and capitalize it by buying domain names this is a great idea. If you know, for instance, that something new is in the works and becoming popular and the .com name isn’t yet taken, you can park it an earn from it. You might get approached by someone later who will pay big money for that domain or you might find that people happen upon it while looking for something else. By filling the landing page with relevant advertisements or affiliate marketing ads and banners, you can make a regular stream of income.

If you are waiting until later on to reserve that great domain name you’ve been thinking about, don’t tarry too long otherwise it could be gone and someone else might either build upon it and use it to their advantage or merely park it and wait to charge you big money for it.

It takes a bit of time to get things ready to do things this way. If you don’t want to take the time, effort and money to register the domain, sign up for affiliate programs, build a page, maintain and manage a page and fill it with advertisements, you can choose to share the profits by working with a company to do the management for you.

There are several companies that will do domain parking for you and pay you a percentage of the fees. Some offer cheap domain name registrations and other incentives to get you to join up.

Many domain parking options are available and if you cannot come up with a catch phrase, you can often come up with a similar name to another company that may get hits. There are some cheap domain names registrars out there with some great deals to offer you.

Notes Of Caution With Domain Parking

Beware though some people that are less than ethical and will do things in the domain biz such as redirect people’s homepage to their parked domain so that people are more likely to click. Be cautious of hidden fees and black hat tactics and be sure to read the fine print because there are some known scams out there that benefit the domain parking company much more than they benefit you. Some people call some domain parking practices domain squatting or cyber squatting and some companies have been known to press charges if they suspect that someone is cybersquatting on a brand name that it their intellectual property. ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) handles complaints of this nature and looks for motives of bad faith when investigating domain parking scams.

Earn Big Profits From Domain Names


Reach for the Goldmine-picking Up Those Money-making Expired Domain Names

Sunday Jun 1, 2008
domain parking
John Khu asked:


Spending your hard earned money to register an expired domain name will help you enhance the visibility of your web site and direct useful traffic and inbound links to add more value to the expired domain. However, with over 50 millions of expired domains up for immediate sale, it could be a tremendous task to find a good domain that can form a viable business asset to you. How do you know that the expired domain that you purchase is the right one for your domain name trading business? The most important issues that you must consider before buying an expired domain are:

A) The amount of traffic that the site receives

B) The type and quality of traffic

When you have this basic information and details, you can try and buy a suitable expired domain name by paying a reasonably good price. Professional domain traders use a number of tools and techniques to guess at the most probable traffic attached to the expired domain. When you get empowered with the required knowledge and skills, you can easily predict, as a guesstimate, the amount of money that a given expired domain can make and derive.

You can make a fair estimate of traffic attached with an expired domain name by using the following three processes or methods:

Tracking traffic: The easiest way to know the amount of traffic an expired domain was receiving is by contacting the owner. Though, the statistics provided by the owner is difficult to believe, you can cross check the owner’s claim by using some of the well known methods like traffic counting scripts and software tools. You can buy one of the well-known traffic finding scripts and tools to asses the commercial viability of the expired domain. Most of these tracking software tools allow you to find additional information like past referral, the quality of visitors and their geographical distribution. Parked domains may provide you an idea of the traffic statistics related to the domain. You may just need to go though the domain sales listing page given on the parking web portal.

Predicting traffic: There are a number of indirect methods that will provide you a fair estimate of traffic. Alexa web portal provides you a comprehensive report on the web performance statistics. High ranking domains receive Alexa ranking just from the type-in type of traffic. A general thumb rule suggests that an Alexa ranking of less than 10, 00,000 for a basic web portal is a good sign and such web portals always receive some amount of traffic. Alexa could be a general guideline and you may need to use the statistics in a general sense. Likewise, the Overture tool will also provide you a general idea of a web portal’s link popularity and inbound traffic. If a domain contains maximum searched keyword, you may safely assume that it has some significant amount of traffic associated with it. Overture keyword search results can be employed as a general predictor or indicator for whether or not a given domain name received traffic. On the other hand, search engine listing also provides a fair idea of the popularity of an expired domain name. Higher the search engine ranking means better traffic and inbound popular links. However, an expired domain may not be listed in the search engine pages. A domain appraisal report will provide you the past traffic statistics of the expired domain name. Link popularity tools provide you a fair estimate of the volume of the traffic and their overall quality. A solitary link emanating from a major web site may signify thousands of other links from minor and inconsequential web sites. Directory listing will also mean a stable type of traffic that is ongoing and continuous.

Domain Dashboard CPanel & Seo Manage


Understanding Domain Name Jargon

Saturday May 24, 2008
domain parking
Dee Buteland asked:


If you are new to domain names, it’s easy to get baffled by the terms used to describe their status. If a domain is ‘free′, what does that really mean? Is an expiring domain the same as a deleted one? Is it better to look for a domain that is for sale, or just register a completely new one?

Here we will explain what all the jargon really means.

You are probably looking for a domain, or want to add another domain to build a site with. Any potential domain you are interested in registering can be either free and available, already registered, expiring, deleted or for sale. Let’s look at each of these now.

1. Free and available

If you have typed a domain name in the address field of a browser, and you get a message like ‘Server not found’, then it is likely that the domain name has not been registered by anyone yet. If you do the same search at a domain name registrar you can confirm the name is still free, and then buy it. If you are having trouble finding a suitable domain name, most of the registrant services, or search tools like domainsbot.com will be able to suggest variants of your keyword.

You should note that a lot of sites mean something different when they talk about a ‘free domain′. They are often referring to the domain name you can get as a freebie when you sign up for web hosting.

2. Already registered

If a domain name is already registered, it means someone else has the name in their ownership. There may or may not be a website associated with it. Some domains are bought by speculators or ‘domainers’ in the hope that they become valuable or someone makes them an offer. If you really want a name which is already registered but not being used, remember the owner will probably ask for far too much. Try to negotiate downwards. If you can′t, look for another name.

3. Expiring

This means the period that the person who registered the name for has expired; they still have a chance to renew it if they want. The domain is ‘on hold’ while the domain registration company awaits contact and payment from the owner. They will do their best to make sure the owner has a chance to renew. Valuable domain names which are about to expire will be snapped up by speculators the instant they are released.

4. Deleted

The expiring period has ended, and the domain is released. It can be registered again by anyone who wants to pay for it.

5. For sale

The owner of the domain is actively trying to sell it, either through an auction, an agent, or through a ‘This domain is for sale′ message on a parked page. You can buy the domain if you want. Remember, unlike physical real estate, most domains sell for a fraction of their advertised price. But remember if the domain is associated with an actual web site, and the site can be found in the search engines, then it could be a more valuable purchase.

Click Here For The Domain Profit Guide


Do Multiple Domains Bring Multiple Traffic?

Friday Apr 4, 2008
domain parking
Colin Hartness asked:


You have registered your business domain and managed to secure a real short and catchy ‘.com′ domain name. It’s optimized with your major keyword and describes your company business to perfection….Congratulations!

You have built your website and optimized for the search engines. Your site contains plenty of good, original content and you have achieved some real useful back-links from very popular related sites. In fact you are starting to make some real headway in the search engines for searches on your major keyword…..Great you are on your way!

Then, you think…”Wait a minute, what about the ‘net, org, biz, info’ etc. Shouldn’t I register these domains also before someone else does? And what about the misspellings and other popular keyword domains that are related to the theme of my website?

You know what, I′m going to register these too. I mean, after all, domains are pretty cheap and for sure all these domains MUST bring even more targeted traffic to my site!”

So you go ahead and register ALL versions of your domain and also a few other domains which include variations of your main keyword. You go ahead and park them all on your main hosting account, each domain serving the content of your main website.

Then what happens? You sit back and enjoy the extra traffic your other domain aquisitions have brought, right?.

Wrong! In fact, panic sets in. Your rankings start to drop dramatically. You can’t find your site anywhere in ANY major search engine! Your site has literally dropped like a stone.

What happended? Where did you go wrong?

Well, the answer is duplicate content and the solution is the magic and very simple 301.

Huh?

Yep. By registering a bundle of domain names and parking them on your main domain you have created a group of webistes with EXACTLY the same web content It’s called duplicate content and in the eyes of all major search engines it is just plain “BAD” and for sure your site WILL be penalized.

So does that mean you need to create different websites for each of the domains that you purchased? Well, you could if you wanted but that would be a lot of hard work.

The solution is a simple 301 direct. Using a 301 direct on each of your domain names you are able to redirect the domain to you main website address and will not be penalized by the search engines. In fact they like the good old 301. It will actually IMPROVE your ranking.

So remember, registering multiple domains is an excellent strategy for driving extra traffic to your site BUT just be sure to use the 301 redirect command on each otherwise you will be penalizing yourself!

Domain Flipping: Learn How To Flip Domain Names And Profit


The How to of Buying a Domain Name

Wednesday Mar 19, 2008
domain parking
Doug Milton asked:


So you’ve decided you want to buy a domain name. Great! But how do you actually do it? Basically, this process boils down to two steps: deciding on the name you want to buy and then actually buying, or registering, the domain name. Then, once you own the domain name, you can decide whether to create a website for it or simply keep it as an investment.

Before You Buy: Deciding on a Domain Name

The first step in buying a domain name is to decide what name you want. Before long, you’ll discover that buying a new, unregistered domain name is really a lot simpler and cheaper than buying a domain name that is already owned by someone else. This because the pool of domain names has been mined by speculators who are only in it to buy up as many names as possible in the hopes that one day someone will want to buy it (as opposed to actually looking to create a website for them). Let’s face it: When someone has something they know you want, they are going to charge top dollar for it. If you are buying something that’s out there for the taking, you’ll get it for a song.

A new, previously unregistered domain name will probably cost you somewhere in the neighborhood of about $10 a year! I know what you’re thinking: “Yeah, but the chances of the name I want being unregistered are so slim!” Not true. Contrary to what you may have heard or read, a great domain name, one you have thought of yourself, can be yours relatively easily.

When you are deciding on what name to buy, think in terms of keywords. Make a list of keywords that relate to the subject or theme of the site you want to build. Then, combine some of those keywords to create a domain name. If you want a domain name based on the actual name of a person, location or business, this process is very straightforward!

Once you have the name in mind, you’ll need to check if it’s already taken. To do this, just type the domain name you want into the Address field of any Web browser like this: www.mydomainnameofchoice.com. If you are directed to a website, the domain name is taken. If not, you’re in luck!

Now On to the Buying

The next thing is to go to a domain registration service. All you need to do is set up an account with your name, snail mail address and e-mail address. These details are required to designate you as the legal owner of the domain. Then you’ll be asked to register the domain you want, either as a public or private registration. If you register privately, your name and contact information will not be made available to the public.

Once the domain name is officially yours, you will have the option of signing up for hosting (if you want to build a site at the domain) or setting up a blog, or of leaving the domain “parked.” If you park the domain, it will remain registered but unused until you are either ready to use the domain or sell it to someone.

As you can see, buying a domain name takes mere minutes. Just follow these steps and you’ll soon be the proud owner of your domain name! It really is just that easy.

Domain Flipping: Learn How To Flip Domain Names And Profit


The Best Web Hosting Service - What Will It Offer Me?

Thursday Jan 17, 2008
domain parking
Don Break asked:


If you are looking for the best web hosting service, what factors should be the most important?

Usually when someone is looking for good web hosting they will compare the same sort of things for each hosting service - the monthly price, the bandwidth and disk space available, features like MySQL, good statistics, domain parking, FrontPage extensions and so on.

While these are important, and everyone will have different requirements depending on the scripts and software they intend to run for their web site, there are a couple of things which if done well can turn an average web host into the best web hosting service available. These are issues which are not apparent from the hosting feature lists which hosting services use to entice you to sign up.

The first of these critical issues is reliability. There is nothing more frustrating than finding that a web site you have been building and promoting for months is regularly not available, either to visitors or to search engine spiders, due to server downtime. Most hosting services will prominently feature uptime guarantees, but there is no industry standard for what ‘uptime’ actually means. Some hosts consider the server to be ‘up’ is the power is on, even if is not serving pages. In addition ’scheduled maintenance’ time is often excluded from the guarantee. If the company’s guarantees are meaningless, how to you assess the real reliability of a host?

You can only do this by getting information about a given host by its actual users, by searching blogs and forums, or by looking for reviews. If you are just starting with hosting for the first time, check how long the host you are considering has been in business too - poor hosts don′t usually last long. The best web hosting service is the most reliable hosting service.

The next critical issue to consider is the support on offer. Here we are talking only about shared hosting (the most common type). With dedicated hosting, you are likely to be paying for support at various levels anyway.

You may believe that you have sufficient webmaster skills to cope with most issues already, and that support is not vital. But consider this: most support issues which affect hosting customers who are not absolute newbies are to do with server configurations, downtime, file paths, file permissions, and hosting restrictions, which are all specific to the particular host service itself. You will inevitably need the help of a human being with your hosting at some point if they don′t reply to emails or answer the phone your website or your business will suffer.

The best web hosting service will have the best support, and will be putting just as much effort into keeping customers happy as they do into recruiting new customers. Again, it is hard to assess what the support is going to be like before you sign up with a web host, but you can get a sense of how good it is by doing some research on the hosting service’s name.

The Profit Lance Automated Wealth Course


Domain Parking. Does It Work?. My Tests And Results

Friday Jan 11, 2008
domain parking
John Livermore asked:


Domain parking is one of those ideas that when you first hear about,you think”That’s too good to be true!”.What is it?.Let’s say you have a Domain name,but you don’t have the time,money,or the technical skill,to develop your own website.You “rent” it out to a company who provides the website, the hosting ,and the advertising.What do you get out of it?.You get a share of the ad revenue your domain(s) generates.It is the internet equivalent of a land lease where the property owner retains title to the land but turns over the use of it in return for rent.Similarly;the land owner is responsible for the taxes,which in this case would be the annual renewal of the domain registration.

Of course the first, second, and third question is;…”how much money can I make doing this?”.Well, I had the same question, as I had amassed a collection of domain names of varying quality that were just sitting around.Wouldn’t it be great to just get checks in the mail!!!.Like most people I tried to do some research to see what the best company to go with would be.So I will be the crash test dummy for you,the reader!.

The first place that many people hear about is Go daddy,since they are the biggest domain registrar,and yes,they do have a domain parking service,which is heavily marketed on there website,like most of there products.In case you didn’t know, most domain parking services are free to the domain ownerafter all ,the parking company is taking the lions share of the revenue from your domain(s).I doubt that 2% of there customers ever see any revenue after subtracting the parking fee.I decided quickly that that product was a no-(Go daddy)bad pun intended!.But that still left plenty of other choices!.

This will have to be the end of the first chapter,but I intend to report on all the various services that I am testing.To learn more about my “adventures in parking” please take a minute to visit my website!.

Mini-Site Profits Exposed