Domain Name News and Info Resources

A good friend of mine asked me for a list of favorite domain name news sources.  I’ve decided that this is post-worthy!  There are several places to get news about the domain name industry that I like to frequent. They have varying perspectives, but I would divide them this way:

Registries / Registrars Perspective – People who manage TLD registries and sell them to the public.
http://domainincite.com
http://thedomains.com (also for domain investors perspective)
http://circleid.com (very professional)
https://twitter.com/bretfausett (great current news on twitter)

Domain Name Resellers Perspective– People who sell domain names (& hosting/web design/other) but are not registrars
http://thewhir.com
http://webhostingtalk.com
http://webhosting.info
http://pingzine.com

Domain Investors Perspective – People who buy 100s or 1000s of domains to trade and invest in aftermarket.
http://elliotsblog.com
http://dnjournal.com
http://domainnamewire.com
http://ricksblog.com – very straightforward and one of the smartest about domain names in the business; however, it is not updated any longer
http://dnforum.com
http://domaining.com – This is actually a feed aggregating many of these other resources.
http://domainnamenews.com
http://domainsherpa.com – great videos about domain names and more

Brand Name Perspective – People who buy 100s or 1000s of domains globally to protect their brands
http://domains.adrforum.com/main.aspx?itemID=1255&hideBar=False&navID=345&news=26
https://www.markmonitor.com/subscription/index.php ( interesting news)
http://www.worldtrademarkreview.com/
http://www.101domain.com/blog/ 🙂

Online Businesses Perspective – People who buy 1 – 10 domains for business or personal use. Internet news in general.
http://onlineretailer.com
http://mashable.com/
http://websitemagazine.com

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The Uncommon Senses of Truly Successful Salespeople

I’m putting together some ideas about “The Uncommon Senses of Truly Successful Salespeople”. Here are two of them.

AN UNCOMMON SENSE OF PURPOSE

What is your definition of success? “Having a goal” is the very basis and definition of success. There are two things we can be absolutely sure of.

1.) We will die before achieving ALL of our goals and,
2.) We will achieve no goals if we don’t set any.

So we need to set personal and business goals. Let’s start today.

AN UNCOMMON SENSE OF URGENCY

If you were a real estate salesperson and sold 10 homes, would you be excited? What if it took you two years to sell those 10 homes, would you still be excited?

Uncommon salespeople always have a sense of urgency. It’s not about how many sales you make; It’s not about your sales volume; It’s about how many sales you make today; It’s about your sales volume this week and this month. In selling, although you want to be confident and calm in your discussions with clients, there is a place for a sense of urgency.

If your life and your work is important to you, print and keep this quote somewhere near your desk:

“We are now faced with the fact, my friends, that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now. In this unfolding conundrum of life and history, there is such a thing as being too late. Procrastination is still the thief of time. Life often leaves us standing bare, naked, and dejected with a lost opportunity. The tide in the affairs of men does not remain at flood — it ebbs. We may cry out desperately for time to pause in her passage, but time is adamant to every plea and rushes on. Over the bleached bones and jumbled residues of numerous civilizations are written the pathetic words, “Too late.”

This is from a moving passage delivered by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr in April 1967 – It applies to all our lives, every day, every week, every month. Let’s learn from it and do better.

THE UNCOMMON SENSES OF UNCOMMON SALESPEOPLE

Most salespeople fail. The statistics are about on par with business in general. Roughly half of business started last for more than 5 years and  less than one-third of them makes it to ten years or more. The failure can be due to many things but mostly it is due to a lack of sales and cash flow. Individual salespeople are about the same. To succeed, to really succeed, you need uncommon senses.

We are born with five senses but these uncommon senses must (and can) be developed. To succeed, salespeople have to be uncommon. There is a group of “senses” that salespeople have to develop in themselves and you can do it on your own by studying and practicing or you can do it by having a good mentor to help you.

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Domain Names Are Better Than QR Codes

A Domain Is Better

How does one know where this goes?

I recently bought a book that held the title, “The Greatest Book Ever Written…” on a particular topic. Although I admire the author and philosophies in general, this particular book turned into the worst book I ever tried to read. I couldn’t get past the third chapter. The reason was because he tried to make use of QR codes to enhance and complete the copy of his book. Each chapter had a QR code leading to enhanced information. My QR reader (for Blackberry) kept acting up and misreading the codes. I downloaded another reader app which worked worse and decided that the whole idea was a bad one.

Before you think, “Joe, you should be owning an iPhone or Droid”, please stop. I’m no technophobe, I love my Blackberry, and I’ve read hundreds of QR codes over the years successfully with it. This article is about using domain names and URLs/URIs in place of QR codes. It’s my contention that in most cases, Quick Response (QR) Codes are neither quicker or more responsive than URLs.

Why Using a URL Beats a QR Code Every Time

Most often, QR codes are being used to lead to simple web pages, adding unnecessary and inefficient layers of complication to a very simple process, getting to a URL with further information (or something more). They are being misused. Think of the example above, what I had to do, and the problems I encountered:

1.) Download one (or more) applications to my cell phone.
2.) Install the app on my phone.
3.) Learn how to use the app.
4.) Scan the QR Codes.
5.) Troubleshoot the application.
6.) Try another QR code reader.
7.) When successful, I had to read on a very small cell phone screen.
8.) If I was near a desktop, I couldn’t use it, because the QR code encrypts the URL.

Wouldn’t it have been much better if the author used a short domain name and simple sub-domains or sub-directories for the enhanced data?

https://alagna.com/this-info-1
https://alagna.com/that-info-2
https://alagna.com/more-info-etc

Simple URLs are much more efficient than QR codes. If you must use QR codes, at least list the URLs being pointed to underneath each code in the same way that vanity phone number users often list actual phone numbers to dial next to their vanity number.

Call 1 (800) NEW-LOAN, Numerically, That’s 1 (800) 639-5626.

Many users aren’t really good at translating vanity numbers to the actual numbers so this is a helpful practice (and for Blackberry users alpha-coded phone numbers are difficult altogether).

I’ve seen arguments that the next generation of Internet and cell phone users will be better at using QR code readers. That’s true, but they are also very fast texters and typers and will appreciate the simplicity of a URL over a QR code in many cases.

What About Print Real Estate?

QR codes look cool and the squares don’t take up much space. But I would argue that a domain name or a short URL takes up less space than those squares do. And they get the point across much more efficiently and to a wider audience. The only difference is the shape. URLs can be a little longer but they certainly can be made to take up less square pixelage than a QR code typically does. With new gTLDs coming soon, the possibilities for short, readable URLs will be endless!

Where QR Codes May be Better…

QR Codes are artistic. They are fun for gamification or in cases where mystery, art, or encryption add to the user experience. Below are some examples that I’ve seen where QR codes can be cool.

QR Code Cookies Beer Glasses
Pizzas Art Galleries
Clothing Tattoos
Sculptures Gardens
Cobblestones Sand Sculptures

I’ve even seen one used as a Censor Bar on a Billboard which was interesting.

Where URLs Are Better (Almost Everywhere)

The QR Cow

The QR Cow

I’ve seen cornfields carved from a bird’s eye view and dairy cows marked to raise awareness of dairy farming. A URL would have been better in both these cases. Here possibly, a URL along with the QR Code might have been best. The QR code for the curious and the URL for most other viewers.

I just read an article titled, 18 Innovative Uses of QR Codes (In Education) at Teachthought.com. I honestly felt that only one or two of the cases made justified the use of a QR Code. The rest of them would have been better off using a clean URL.

Innovation in the Domain Name Space

The one thing that is baffling me is why no one has invented a mobile OCR app that scans and goes to URLs. I searched for one today and couldn’t find it; nothing. Maybe someone seeing this can create the app? That would make a great mobile application for domain names. With something like that, a URL could be automatically read from a mobile phone and take users to the web page, or for users that like to type real fast, the web page would be instantly recognizable.

Sources:

26 Creative Ways to Use QR Codes
http://www.boredpanda.org/26-creative-ways-to-use-qr-codes/

18 Innovative Uses of QR Codes

18 Innovative Uses Of QR Codes

AppNewser.com gives five creative (artistic) uses of QR codes that I like.
http://www.mediabistro.com/appnewser/top-five-creative-uses-of-qr-codes_b32766

Why QR Codes Aren’t Catching On
http://www.cnn.com/2011/12/08/tech/mobile/qr-codes-gahran

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ICANN Infographics by XPlane

Xplane.com has created some fantastic graphics that help to explain the structure and function of ICANN. Those of us who attend ICANN meetings and participate in it’s initiatives sometimes joke that we “run the Internet”. Nothing could be further from the truth but its fun to think that.

These graphics help to visualize how decisions about domain names are made and how the Internet is really governed. By the way, anyone can attend ICANN meetings and participate in the proceedings. The only costs are travel, sustenance, and accommodations. Enjoy the graphics. They are in the commons. Thanks Xplane!

Who Runs the Internet

Who Runs the Internet

 

One World, One Internet

One World, One Internet

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