Making Money With Domains

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Archive for August, 2009

  • Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-08-23: Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-08-16: Revisiting the CPA Business Model:.. http://bit.ly/1IYvDD #
  • NameMedia Sells over $800,000 in Domain Names Last Week: NameMedia has stronger-than-usual sales week.
    NameMedi.. http://bit.ly/Fy5WZ #
  • Domainer Mardi Gras Set for February Return: Popular conference making its return.
    Building on the success (and.. http://bit.ly/aDc9L #
  • Domain Expiration Comments to ICANN Working Group: My comments on expired domains.
    As I wrote last week, ICANN .. http://bit.ly/1smInz #
  • Adsense as a Platform and What it Means for Publishers: Google Adsense shows off its platform.
    Google Adsense i.. http://bit.ly/3BJC52 #
  • Which Domain Conferences You Should Go To in 2010: A handy guide to choosing a domain conference.
    Well, I guess.. http://bit.ly/6yiCv #

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  • Filed under: Domain Names
  • A handy guide to choosing a domain conference.

    Well, I guess the domain name conference wars are on again. We already knew about two conferences in the first two months of the year — DOMAINfest and Domainer MardiGras. But then, despite having only two conferences in the U.S. this year, T.R.A.F.F.I.C. found it necessary to hold a conference in Las Vegas just before DOMAINfest. And so it begins.

    Since most people don’t want to attend every conference, I’ve put together this handy guide to help you choose a conference. There’s not a “best conference” for everyone; it really depends on what you’re looking for. It you don’t care about programming, ignore that rating. If you don’t care about striking deals at the conference, ignore that rating. Just find the conference that is best for what you’re looking for. These are my opinions on each conference, although I cross checked them with a couple other experts in our field to make sure I wasn’t way off on any of them. And of course, if you disagree, feel free to comment.

    Explanation of ratings:

    Size – based on audience. Takes into consideration most recent conference and historical trends.

    Cost – conference pass cost, excluding hotel.

    Programming – quality of programming, including diverse speakers, “fresh” topics, programming scheduled well in advance.

    Professionalism – sessions start on time, professional/prepared moderators.

    Cohesiveness – level of attendee, ability to easily network and find people you’re looking for (adversely affected by size).

    Deal Making – level of deal making at conference.

    Conference Venue & Food – overall quality of venue and food

    Here they are, in alphabetical order.

    Domainer Mardi Gras
    What’s new in 2010: No longer under Modern Domainer umbrella

    Known for: Fun

    Size: Small

    Cost: Low

    Programming: Medium

    Professionalism: Medium

    Cohesiveness: High

    Deal Making: Medium

    Venue: Medium

    DOMAINfest

    What’s new in 2010: moves to the beach, possible second conference in the fall.

    Known for: High quality production, huge parties, big crowd. Organized by Oversee.net.

    Size: Large

    Cost: Moderate

    Programming: High

    Professionalism: High

    Cohesiveness: Medium

    Deal Making: High

    Venue: High

    Domain Roundtable
    What’s new in 2010: Nothing announced; annual conference takes place later in year

    Known for: Drawing more than just domainers, policy angle

    Size: Small

    Cost: Moderate

    Programming: High

    Professionalism: Medium

    Cohesiveness: High

    Deal Making: High

    Venue: High

    GeoDomain Expo
    What’s new in 2010: Moves to New Orleans, hopefully less internal drama

    Known for: Bringing together the “local web” audience and geo domain owners

    Size: Small

    Cost: Low

    Programming: Moderate

    Professionalism: High

    Cohesiveness: High

    Deal Making: Moderate

    Venue: Moderate-High

    T.R.A.F.F.I.C.
    What’s new in 2010: Partnership with Rick Latona, 6 conferences (2 in U.S.)

    Known for: First real domain conference, big live domain auctions

    Size: Medium

    Cost: High

    Programming: Low (but improving)

    Professionalism: Low

    Cohesiveness: High

    Deal Making: High

    Venue: High


    © DomainNameWire.com 2009.

    Review and rate domain name parking companies at Parking Judge.

    Related posts:

    1. Two Unique Domain Conferences on Tap for June
    SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

    A handy guide to choosing a domain conference.

    Well, I guess the domain name conference wars are on again. We already knew about two conferences in the first two months of the year — DOMAINfest and Domainer MardiGras. But then, despite having only two conferences in the U.S. this year, T.R.A.F.F.I.C. found it necessary to hold a conference in Las Vegas just before DOMAINfest. And so it begins.

    Since most people don’t want to attend every conference, I’ve put together this handy guide to help you choose a conference. There’s not a “best conference” for everyone; it really depends on what you’re looking for. It you don’t care about programming, ignore that rating. If you don’t care about striking deals at the conference, ignore that rating. Just find the conference that is best for what you’re looking for. These are my opinions on each conference, although I cross checked them with a couple other experts in our field to make sure I wasn’t way off on any of them. And of course, if you disagree, feel free to comment.

    Explanation of ratings:

    Size – based on audience. Takes into consideration most recent conference and historical trends.

    Cost – conference pass cost, excluding hotel.

    Programming – quality of programming, including diverse speakers, “fresh” topics, programming scheduled well in advance.

    Professionalism – sessions start on time, professional/prepared moderators.

    Cohesiveness – level of attendee, ability to easily network and find people you’re looking for (adversely affected by size).

    Deal Making – level of deal making at conference.

    Conference Venue & Food – overall quality of venue and food

    Here they are, in alphabetical order.

    Domainer Mardi Gras
    What’s new in 2010: No longer under Modern Domainer umbrella

    Known for: Fun

    Size: Small

    Cost: Low

    Programming: Medium

    Professionalism: Medium

    Cohesiveness: High

    Deal Making: Medium

    Venue: Medium

    DOMAINfest

    What’s new in 2010: moves to the beach, possible second conference in the fall.

    Known for: High quality production, huge parties, big crowd. Organized by Oversee.net.

    Size: Large

    Cost: Moderate

    Programming: High

    Professionalism: High

    Cohesiveness: Medium

    Deal Making: High

    Venue: High

    Domain Roundtable
    What’s new in 2010: Nothing announced; annual conference takes place later in year

    Known for: Drawing more than just domainers, policy angle

    Size: Small

    Cost: Moderate

    Programming: High

    Professionalism: Medium

    Cohesiveness: High

    Deal Making: High

    Venue: High

    GeoDomain Expo
    What’s new in 2010: Moves to New Orleans, hopefully less internal drama

    Known for: Bringing together the “local web” audience and geo domain owners

    Size: Small

    Cost: Low

    Programming: Moderate

    Professionalism: High

    Cohesiveness: High

    Deal Making: Moderate

    Venue: Moderate-High

    T.R.A.F.F.I.C.
    What’s new in 2010: Partnership with Rick Latona, 6 conferences (2 in U.S.)

    Known for: First real domain conference, big live domain auctions

    Size: Medium

    Cost: High

    Programming: Low (but improving)

    Professionalism: Low

    Cohesiveness: High

    Deal Making: High

    Venue: High


    © DomainNameWire.com 2009.

    Review and rate domain name parking companies at Parking Judge.

    Related posts:

    1. Two Unique Domain Conferences on Tap for June
    SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

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