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Archive for November, 2008

EC : Internet advertising will be relatively unscathed in the downturn

November 30th, 2008

From The Economist

AT THE beginning of the year Jeff Zucker, the boss of NBC Universal, a big television and film company, told an audience of TV executives that their biggest challenge was to ensure “that we do not end up trading analogue dollars for digital pennies”. He meant that audiences were moving online faster than advertisers, thus leaving media companies short-changed. Now, near the end of the year, the situation looks even worse, as the recession threatens to turn even the analogue dollars into pennies. Will this hasten the shift towards internet advertising, or will it decline too?

Advertising rises and falls with the economy, though how much is a matter of debate. Randall Rothenberg, the boss of the Interactive Advertising Bureau, a trade association for digital advertisers, points to the remarkable stability of advertising at about 2% of GDP since 1919, when the data began to be collected. This would suggest that ad budgets will move roughly in line with economic output.

But Mary Meeker, an internet analyst at Morgan Stanley, believes that modern ad budgets rise and fall much more than GDP does. According to her estimates, if the economy stops growing, ad spending is likely to fall by 4%. If the economy shrinks by 2%, overall ad spending may fall by 10%. As for the online segment, recent history is cause for pessimism. Between 2000 and 2002, during the dotcom recession, online ad spending in America fell by 27%.

Yet the web has changed a lot since 2002. Back then, gaudy display “banners” on web portals such as Yahoo! and MSN were the preferred technology. These still exist, but they now account for less than 20% of online ad spending. More than half goes to search advertising on Google and rival search-engines, which place small text ads next to results based on the keyword of the query, and charge only when a user clicks on them. In brand advertising, “rich media” ads are taking over from banners. These allow users to interact by clicking, so their engagement can be tracked.

All this makes spending on advertising much less speculative, so that it starts to be treated instead as a cost of sales. This is one reason why online advertising should suffer less than other sorts. This week eMarketer, a market-research firm, predicted that online-advertising spending in America, which makes up about half the global total, will increase by 8.9% in 2009, rather than the 14.5% it had forecast in August. The firm thinks search advertising will grow by 14.9% and rich-media ads by 7.5%, whereas display ads will grow by 6.6%. In short, online advertising will continue to expand in the recession—just not as quickly as previously expected.

Internet advertising will be relatively unscathed in the downturn | Not ye olde banners | The Economist

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DNW - Bank Buys 3 Char Domain

November 18th, 2008

Fresh off a million dollar sales week, domain broker Sedo is keeping the momentum alive despite not completing any six figure transactions over the past week.

The top sale for the week was ABL.com for $50,000. The seller was ABL Research, Inc. of Duluth, Georgia. The buyer appears to be Allied Bank of Pakistan, which has used the domain name ABL.com.pk for its web presence. The latest balance sheet for the bank show it has 334 billion rupees in assets.

Sedo sold two other three letter dot com domain names: GIW.com for $13,500 and FYC.com for $7,500.

Here are other notable sales for the week:

towelbars.com 12,000 USD
shlomo.com 10,000 USD
fyc.com 7,500 USD
newyorkers.com 5,100 USD GreatDomains
turbopoker.com 5,000 USD
investorflow.com 5,000 USD
lekarze.pl 14,000 EUR Doctors in Polish
welcome.in 5,250 EUR
ringtones.be 4,500 EUR
silver.biz 9,500 USD

I’m particularly impressed by the sale of Silver.biz, which ranks in the top 4 highest public sales of .biz of all time, according to NameBio.

Domain Name Wire - The Domain Industry’s News Source

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TC - What Recession? PriveCo Coughs Up $1 Million For Vibrators.com

November 12th, 2008

Robin Wauters writes …

Privately-owned PriveCo, which specializes in retailing “embarrassing” products online, has paid $1 million for the acquisition of the domain name vibrators.com (a little NSFW).

PriveCo began selling private things out of a spare bedroom on a website called ShopInPrivate.com back in 1998, and has steadily grown to an operation with 12 separate retail sites whose warehouse ships 1500+ packages per week.

This is how they justify the price of the domain name:

* It is an instantly recognizable name,
* Tied to products that people want to buy in complete privacy
* Customers will value PriveCo’s policies and services
* Competitor websites lack professionalism and tact
* PriveCo has strong experience in this field

What Recession? PriveCo Coughs Up $1 Million For Vibrators.com

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DNKitchen - Interview with Rick Latona

November 5th, 2008

Chef Patrick writes …

After my interview with Rick Schwartz someone asked me to interview Rick Latona. Well, I have come through again. I have been asking Rick for months to do an interview, I must have caught him on a good day last week because he finally agreed.Besides being the 2008 Domainer Of The Year, Rick is the LARGEST domain broker in the world and most recently has been added to the TRAFFIC auction events. In his first TRAFFIC auction which was held in Brooklyn NY only two months ago Rick’s auction brought in roughly $700,000. We will find out very soon if he can top that, next TRAFFIC event is in two weeks which will be hosted in Australia.OK, lets see what Rick has to say about some of my questions.

Interview with Rick Latona - Domainer Of The Year | DNKitchen - Domain News - Domaining - Domainer Blog

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