Showing posts with label domain name investors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label domain name investors. Show all posts

2016-01-13

GoDaddy $GDDY Launches Mobile App For Domain Name Investors

GoDaddy announced today a new App which "brings real-time bidding and monitoring on GoDaddy Auctions to mobile devices, Android and Apple iOS"--

GoDaddy Investor v 1.0 is now available on iPhone and iPad (iOS 8 and above) and Android phones (4.1 and above) in English-speaking markets.

From the GoDaddy announcement:

GoDaddy [NYSE:GDDY], which operates the world's largest domain name aftermarket, today announces the launch of its first mobile app for domain investors. The GoDaddy Investor app, launching on iOS and Android, will allow investors to watch and bid on domains at auction and stay on top of their current bids all from their mobile device. Aftermarket domain auctions are time-sensitive and highly competitive, and it's critical that investors are able to easily participate at any time and from anywhere, not just from their computers.

GoDaddy Investor offers several additional features not previously available. After downloading the app, domain investors are able to monitor a watch list of active expiry domain auctions in real time, as well as view their bidding history. Investors can also see the auction history for each domain, including the number of bidders and the prices of their bids. Investors can also place proxy bids and securely re-authenticate with their Auction PIN (Android, iOS) or Touch ID (iOS). A streamlined, visual dashboard count shows, at-a-glance, how many auctions investors have won, bid on, or are watching overall. Finally, since auctions are won and lost in an instant, push notifications will immediately alert investors when they've been outbid on auctions that are ending soon.

"We worked closely with our domain investors to bring the same great investing experience to mobile that they've enjoyed on desktop for years," said Paul Nicks,GoDaddy's Senior Director of Aftermarket. "The new GoDaddy Investor app was designed with the timely nature of domain bids in mind, allowing investors to register valuable pre-owned domain names, win more auctions and keep a closer eye on their bids, no matter where they are."




DISCLAIMER

2014-11-06

Web.Com Group Stock Tanks, New gTLDs Kill Domains Aftermarket

Web.com Group Inc. Stock Chart
Web.com Group Inc. Stock Chart (source: Marketwatch.com)
Today Web.com Group (NASDAQ:WWWW) stock is tanking (see above, source: Marketwatch).
UPDATE--at market close 6Nov2014: WWWW $14.71  -5.54 (-27.33%) [source:Seeking Alpha] while overall the NASDAQ closed up +17.75 +0.38% at 4,638.47 (source: Bloomberg).

Web.com Group operates various brands in the domain name industry including registrars web.com, networksolutions.com, and register.com.

Yesterday afternoon (5 Nov 2014), Web.com Group (NASDAQ:WWWW) presented its Q3 2014 Results in a conference call. Excerpts below (emphasis added) from Web.com Group's (WWWW) CEO David Brown on Q3 2014 Results - 5 Nov 2014 Earnings Call Transcript | Seeking Alpha [my "translation" appears within brackets below]

David L. Brown - Web.com Group Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President: "First, in the domain business, while we continue to expect the recently expanded top-level domain environment to increase our ability to sell domains over the medium to long term, the increased availability of names has had a near-term negative impact on domain-related revenue. This is primarily associated with noncore domain-related revenue such as sales of premium domain names and bulk domain sales. While not a significant part of our overall domain business, it has historically represented several million dollars of quarterly revenue. But given the current environment, we now expect minimal contribution in the coming quarter." 

[Translation: Since ICANN's new gTLDs (new generic Top-Level Domains) came out, the domain name business has been bad, but medium to long term we hope it will get better.]

David L. Brown - Web.com Group Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President: There's a marketplace out in the U.S. and around the world that buys domains and resells them or monetizes them, and we've seen that market get soft. We actually commented on this in our second quarter call that we were beginning to see softness. We saw it continue to soften further. Our belief is the reason the softness is occurring is that this marketplace is looking at all of these new gTLDs coming into place, i.e., there are more options available for people and they're kind of stepping back away, at least temporarily, to see how things settle out. We continue to believe that this market could come back. But for the sake of conservatism, we have effectively taken this revenue out of our model for the fourth quarter because we can't predict how long this behavior is going to continue.

[Translation: Web.com Group (web.com, networksolutions.com, register.com) does not expect to make any money in domain name aftermarket sales due to the chaos and confusion caused by the current launch of over 1300 new gTLDs by ICANN, which is causing domain name investors to become cautious and the market to go "soft."]

Gray Powell - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division: "So on the domain name side, I just want to make sure that I have it correct. So specifically, you're saying that new gTLDs are impacting the resale of domain names in the aftermarket. Is that right?"

David L. Brown - Web.com Group Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President: "That's our belief at this point. When we commented in the second quarter, it was just beginning to impact us, and we really didn't understand it at that point. Upon investigation and discussion with some of the purchasers in the marketplace, we see a much more cautious attitude in the marketplace. And we just believe that demand has softened, which leads us to believe that people have kind of -- are taking a wait-and-see attitude relative to this new phenomenon of gTLDs and the new opportunities they create."

[Tanslation: "Opportunities" means "problems and financial pitfalls," i.e., the new gTLDs are BAD NEWS for almost everyone: trademark holders, law enforcement, consumers, the domain name industry (see above), as well as domain name registrants and investors. It's called "flooding the market" and creating gross oversupply or a "glut," which leads to commoditizing (falling prices) and a shakeout in the industry with a few well-capitalized big operators (Google and Amazon?) eventually controlling marketshare. The premium extensions .COM and well-run ccTLDs should weather the storm and maintain and continue to increase in value over the long-term, but do not expect savvy domain name investors to follow the new gTLDs over the cliff. There are plenty of .COM and ccTLD domain names available--we were never "running out of .COM domain names" and ICANN never considered "consumer demand" as a relevant factor in whether to create more gTLD domain name extensions. ICANN just decided to "glut" the market "because they can" and because it would make a "lot of money" for ICANN, at least in the short term.]

See also: WWWW: The Greatest Stock Promotion Story Ever Told | Stocks and Dollars: "...This company is engaged in an unattractive low-growth commodity business of selling domain names...." and  We're doing great, say [new gTLD] dot-London chiefs ... Unfortunately, few agree • The Register




2014-10-21

Verisign, TRAFFIC Domain Name Conference, Miami Beach

Glad to hear that Verisign is the Premier Sponsor at TRAFFIC, the domain name conference being held October 30- November 2, at Miami Beach's iconic Fontainebleau Hotel. Kudos to Rick, Howard, et al on the 10th Anniversary Show! It will be a good time to reminisce while assessing the present and future of domain name investing and the industry as a whole.

As for Verisign, it's about time they started giving back to the domain name investors who have given so much to Verisign! As noted last week by TUCOWS (Hover) President and CEO Elliot Noss at the ICANN Public Forum, there's about a billion dollars (US$) of revenue built-in to Verisign's registry contract for .COM, and TUCOWS (among many others, I'm sure) would be willing to perform the contract for a lot less:

Regretfully, due to prior commitments, I can not be in Miami at TRAFFIC next week, however, for those of you lucky enough to be going, I have a few words of advice. A wise old man once told me: "First you learn to listen, then you listen to learn, then you learn who to listen to." The key advantage of going to TRAFFIC versus most other so-called "domain name conferences" is that there will be a lot more people there worth listening to.

As for the venue, the hotel and the locationit really doesn't get any better than this (anywhere in the world!). Back in the 1990s, when I was doing a lot of blue-water offshore sailing, I sailed into Government Cut and docked a Beneteau Oceanis at the Miami Beach Marina for a few days while awaiting delivery of some needed parts for repairs. I took advantage of that opportunity to walk around most of South Beach (southern part of Miami Beach), was seduced by the place and have been in love with it ever since. So if you have never been there, you have a treat awaiting you! While the Fontainebleu, which is located in the Mid-Beach area, has a lot on site, try to see at least a little of South Beach and beyond, if you have the time. My short-list recommendations:

Shopping: Lincoln RoadCollins Avenue/Ocean Drive district; also check out Espanola Way.
Sightseeing: of course, #1 is the Beach itself--my favorite part is from about 22nd Street to South Pointe; and see the rest of Miami Beach; beyond the Beach: Shark Valley in the Everglades, Coconut Grove, Coral Gables, Little Havana, and the Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden.
Dining: too many to list! Look here and here. Among my personal favorites: YardbirdKhong River House (and above it Patpong Road); Prime 112 (and Prime ItalianPrime FishBig Pink); and of course, the classic, Joe's Stone Crab; and beyond the Beach: Perricone's.

By the way, don't try to do any of this "on the cheap"--you'll just be cheating yourself.

Enjoy!

-- John Poole, Domain Mondo



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