Now with the disappearance of daily newspapers, who will rule the local space? Will it be geo domainers? The Panel included Ron Donoho of SanDiego.com, Ron Jackson of DNJournal, Kerry Murakami of the Seattle Post-Globe with moderator Dan Pulcrano of Boulevards New Media. The consensus was that with many talented journalists and photographers being laid off, why not take this opportunity to scoop them up to beef up your content?
Future of GeoDomains and New TLDs
As a controversial topic for this .com centric organization, the future of GeoDomains and New TLDs was one of the best attended seminars with the Castello Brothers, David and Michael Castello of Cities Internet Network, Jothan Frakes of Minds + Machines, Phil Corwin of the Internet Commerce Association, and moderator, Tim Cole the Chief Registrar Liaison at ICANN. The continued topic heard throughout the event of “.com is king” or ".com is the golden standard" was prevalent with strong commentary from the Castello brothers as well as feedback from the audience. Jothan Frakes and others from the audience, including .travel, were supportive of the controlled expansion of the Internet into category specific TLDs.
News Makers and Buzz Generators
The attendees of the GeoDomain Expo had the opportunity to hear the latest updates from the blogosphere and domaining industry press with Elliot Silver of Elliot’s Blog, Sean Stafford of Modern Domainer Magazine, Andrew Alleman of Domain Name Wire with moderator Ron Jackson. Many agreed that one's choice of headlines does affect a blogger’s success. Additionally, each blogger does have a voice, but writing something that an individual can understand without being a part of the domaining industry is crucial.
As the highlight of most domaining events, the GeoDomain auction too had a premium name auction. Aftermarket.com and DomainConsultant.com orchestrated the auction. This was my first ever, outside auction, which showcased a well-rounded list of destination, keyword rich domain names across various extensions such as .biz, .info, .org, .com, .us, and .travel. Although many were priced well below their value the auction, the opportunity slipped by many of the online and house bidders. Twenty-nine of the names sold for over a $101K total with the highest bid at $15K for SierraMadre.com. However, all the names are still available until May 5th, but at more aggressive pricing.
In seems to be the season of domain auctions. I look forward to giving you an update on this extended auction as well as Rick Latona’s and Moniker’s later this week.


