What's in a (domain) name? Your chance
for online success.
A conversation with Mike Mann,
President of BuyDomains.com
by Dana Greenlee, co-host WebTalkGuys Radio
When building a business and a brand on the Web, your chosen domain name is
everything.
Website domain names - the Internet address the helps Web surfers find your site - are the
backbone on which we all locate things on the Web and thus are the communications glue
that makes the web work as well as it does. For any new or existing business, selecting a
domain name can be the most challenging and frustrating process that a business can
undertake.
This process can often times cause an existing business to change its name to fit a
domain name. It simply is getting harder to find a good name that has not been registered.

This is where Mike Mann fits in. Mann is the president of BuyDomains.com. He owns 250,000 of
the finest domain brands in the world. He took a few moments to explain his unique
perspective on domain names as another form of real estate - or in this case virtual real
estate - and how many good high value domain names are still available for a price.
Listen to the audio discussion with Mike Mann
33 min. at 20K Stream
WinMedia Mobile WinMedia (2.2 MB download)
mp3 (full show; 10.6 MB download)
Q: How long has BuyDomains.com been
around on the Web?
Mann: Weve been around about five years now.
Q: Tell us about the core services you offer on your site.
Mann: We mainly offer premium domain names for sale. Secondarily, we do domain
registration services with a variety of free value added services that come with each
registration.
Q: It seems BuyDomains.com is focused on treating domains as another form of real
estate.
Mann: Domains are real estate on the Web. There is a certain amount of space on
the Web which is determined ultimately by the number of eyeballs. There are X billion
people per day on the Web and you can carve up those eyeballs as they hit different
Websites. The better domain names in the world receive more traffic, therefore they are
better pieces of real estate. Location, location, location!
Q: How do you assign value to those names?
Mann: We do pretty complex metrics evaluations. We try to break down the domain
to a multitude of characteristics. We have software that does a big piece of the
evaluation. We also have three of the worlds best domain appraisers that come up
with the ultimate price. They are the best because theyve sold dramatically more
domains than anyone else in the world.
Q: What is the best profile of a domain name?
Mann: A .com is definitely the best domain. Any domain that you change to a.net
would instantly be worth roughly a quarter of what the .com is worth. A .org is meant more
for a charity, but the .orgs in general would be worth substantially less. We find
that .biz is okay. We dont like .tv at all unless you have a TV show and only a few
hundred people in the world would have a use for that. They would prefer to have
buydomainsTV.com rather than buydomains.tv.
Q: It used to be the goal to get a domain name with as few words as possible. A
five-letter domain name would be excellent. How important now is the length of the domain
name?
Mann: The shorter domain the better. Historically, people were trying to save
space and would truncate their domain names.
For instance, buydmns.com would save space, but in reality it was bad for my
brand.
It is necessary to have your entire brand names spelled out, regardless of the length. We
recommend that if you are serious about your brand, you get every possible combination of
your domain name and point them all to the same site.
That is called a forwarding service. In our case, we dont charge any extra for that.
Q: Do you have a favorite domain name that you own and is available for sale?
Mann: I have Maid.com. Another one of my favorites is Tasty.com. We also have
Broadcasting.net.
Q: What kind of dollar amount are we talking about for these domain names?
Mann: Those particular ones are in the tens of thousands since the are the very
best ones, but most are between a few hundred and a few thousand dollars.
Q: What you think about VeriSigns recent changes in going after the
unassigned domain names and trying to hijack those for ad revenue?
Mann: It is unbelievable how they believe they have the right to steal every
single Internet address in the world.
VeriSign stole every single possible
combination of letters that anybody could accidentally type as a Web address. Thats
because the government handed them a monopoly years and years ago and theyve been
abusing it over and over and over.
The government does not hold them to account. It is the biggest joke that I have ever seen
and there are lots of people suing them.
This has blindsided everybody and it is extremely unfair trade. Many of us have documented
all their illegal abuses over the years, delivered them to the Department of Commerce,
delivered them to the FTC, delivered them to the Department of Justice, delivered them to
all the senators and congressmen, delivered them to ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) who were
supposed to regulate them, but nobody has ever done a thing to them.
Its just the insiders club of stealing the Internet.
Authors note: For information on the details of what some are
calling the Great
Internet Hijacking of 2003, see the WashingtonPost.com article entitled
Not The Publics Domain by Jonathan Krim, published Thursday, October 2 (www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A31115-2003Oct1.html).
For more conversation with Mike Mann, the full audio interview is available starting
Saturday at WebTalkGuys.com. His Website is at www.BuyDomains.com. He is also
Executive Director of GrassRoots.org,
a charitable organization.
WebTalkGuys, a Seattle-based talk show featuring technology news and
interviews. It is broadcast on WebTalkGuys
Radio, Sonic Box, via Pocket
PC at Mazingo Networks
and the telephone via the Mobile Broadcast
Network. It's on the radio in Seattle at KLAY 1180 AM and KVTI 90.9 FM.
Past shows and interviews are also webcast via the Internet at http://www.webtalkguys.com.
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