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October 14, 2015

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Here's the The Lowdown from DN Journal,
updated daily
to fill you in on the latest buzz going around the domain name industry. 

The Lowdown is compiled by DN Journal Editor & Publisher Ron Jackson.

Maybe We Shouldn't Unfriend Facebook After All - Social Media Users Are Flocking to Domain Names 

With changes in the way people use the Internet - gravitating to social media sites, accessing information through apps, etc. - there have been a lot of predictions in recent years that domain names would eventually lose their place as the dominant way people navigate the web. I never bought that and have always felt that people and businesses that rely, for example, on a Facebook page rather than their own domain name for their sole web presence were making a potentially fatal mistake

While a fair number of businesses 

My Name Is... image from Bigstock

still haven't yet figured out that they're "turning over the keys to the store" when they rely solely on Facebook, an incredibly large number of individual users are showing more brand sense than their commercial counterparts. The world's biggest registrar, Go Daddy, released a report today noting that over the past 18 months the number of their customers who are pointing their personal domain names to social media sites has soared 37%. Go Daddy isn't the only company to notice the shift either. Recently VeriSign, the registry for .com domain names, stated they saw an increase of more than 10% for domains pointing to sites like Facebook and LinkedIn in Q2 versus Q1.

GoDaddy attributes these growing registrations to customers wanting to control their online identity. Having you own domain allows you to reinforce your name or brand rather than the brand of an individual site like Facebook, Instagram, Twitter or whatever it might be. 

The domain can be a perfect shortcut to your Facebook profile page and if you run into a problem there (they can terminate your account for any reason they wish) you can just point your domain to another social media site or to a website of your own.

Michael McLaughlin
Sr. VP & General Manager
Go Daddy

GoDaddy Senior Vice President and General Manager Mike McLaughlin said, "It became abundantly clear that people want to have more control of their online identity. Their social media presence reflects who they are, but they want an address that represents them as well.  Also, customers want the flexibility to move to a different platform or create their own website without giving everyone a new web address."

A good example is Rabbi Dan Medwin, Publishing Technology Manager for the Central Conference of American Rabbis, who points his domain, DanMedwin.com, to his Facebook page. Medwin said, "The Web is now the de facto place where folks go to learn about a person or company. I registered DanMedwin.com so, if someday I wanted a personal website, whether a blog or a resume, I'd have it available. It is essentially my personally curated 'brand' of myself for the world." 

Based on their findings, GoDaddy created an easier way for customers to redirect a domain name to their social media profile. Someone registering a new domain name can visit Personal Domains on GoDaddy and select Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter or Tumblr. The customer gives GoDaddy the social media URL that they would like to point the domain name to during the checkout process and GoDaddy takes care of the rest. For those who already have a domain name, GoDaddy enables customers to quickly connect their domain name to one of 18 popular Web services, including Facebook, Etsy and YouTube

Since many people are active on multiple social media sites I have no doubt that, given how inexpensive new domain registrations are, some of those people are already registering multiple  domain names so they have one to redirect to each of their social media site profiles. With hundreds of new domain extensions now available, one could even match their personal name with an extension that corresponds with the kind of destination the name directs too - for example there is already a .social TLD (operated by Rightside) and a .chat TLD (operated by Donuts). If possible, I  would, of course, recommend getting the .com version of your personal name first but if you can't there are still many viable options to secure your own brand on the web. If this trend continues we domain investors won't be the only ones holding a "portfolio" of domains.

(Posted October 5, 2015) 


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