Two of the domain monetization giants just got married. Parked, one of our favorite domain parking companies, just bought WhyPark, one of our favorite pseudo-development companies. The synergies here are mind-boggling. The first word I got of this was when WhyPark dropped their $100 fee. Later this morning the official announcement was made by Craig... Continue Reading →
WhyPark Drops the $100 Fee
WhyPark's domain development services once cost $100 for 100 domains. As I noted in a previous post the basic services will aggregate content from article directories on your sites. You add your own AdSense ad code or use one of their monetization options and you have a site full of content. For a fee you... Continue Reading →
Sedo Begins Absorbing RevenueDirect Accounts
The domain giant Sedo has given RevenueDirect customers six days to link their RevenueDirect accounts with a Sedo account. It's not clear what will happen if people don't comply. If you have a Sedo account the process is simple. Just click on the link in the email and enter your Sedo credentials when you get... Continue Reading →
Yahoo Stats Finally Coming In
Yahoo-based domain parking companies reported stats delays in the last week of March. Parked and NameMedia (ActiveAudience, GoldKey, and SmartName) reported that most stats are now in, with some stats for international traffic possibly still outstanding. Parked released their final numbers for the second half of March this evening.
By the Numbers (April 2009)
by Howard Hoffman
In a previous column I discussed the decline in revenue from parking pages. In this installment, we will look at some of the reasons that Revenue Per Click (RPC) has declined.
At DOMAINfest Global in January, Google representative Hal Bailey blamed the decline in RPC on Google-supplied parking pages on the decline in the world economy. Certainly, there is some truth to that, at least over the last 12 months or so. As companies see their business contract, they reduce their advertising, including their online advertising. As companies go out of business all together, they cease all advertising. Fewer advertisers competing for clicks means that they will be paying less for those clicks. On the other hand, my results indicate that RPC started to decline well before the current recession even started.
Google and Yahoo have both figured out ways to keep a larger share of the revenue. As an early advertiser on Yahoo PPC (back in 2000 when it was an independent company called GoTo.com), I am rather familiar with the purchasing side of Pay Per Click. Last year, Yahoo revamped their advertiser interface and offered me a one-on-one session with one of their support staff. In the old days, if I wanted to bid on a term, say "Las Vegas Hotel", I would bid a specific number, say $1.00. Today, it is possible for a Yahoo advertiser to bid one amount for "Search" pages and a different amount for "Content" pages. As an advertiser, I recently was encouraged to bid lower for the content pages. So, I might only bid $.50 for the term "Las Vegas Hotel" on content pages. On search pages, Yahoo (and Google) collects 100% of the revenue, since they own the page. On content pages, Yahoo has to share the revenue with the parking provider and the domain owner, typically keeping on the order of 35% of the revenue (the actual percentage is kept confidential from the general public, including domain owners).
WhyPark adds Features and Charges
WhyPark was the first quasi-development platform. [Update 4/28/09 - They have dropped the $1200 fee!] For $100 you could add up to 100 domains and they would build them out with content from article directories. You added your own AdSense ad code and you had a site full of content. At least that was the... Continue Reading →
DevHub Improves on Evo Formula
DevHub is a tool to help you develop your domains. It is essentially the reincarnation of EvoLanding, the service that created great looking sites that did not monetize well. The new sites look even better, but the big news is the control that you have over your sites on the back-end. Below is a screen... Continue Reading →
Parking Stats you Don’t Often See
Jamie Zoch of DotWeekly.com posted some very interesting stats that he culled from RegisterStats.com. According to the artcle: Sedo has 1,964,104 domains parking with its service.NameDrive has 478,279 domain names using its parking service.TrafficZ has 295,242 using its parking service.WhyPark has 57,986 domains using its service. These stats are from 3/27/09.
Jeff Kupietzky Happily Loses his Voice
http://blip.tv/play/gcAb8JtDAA Jeff Kupietzky had very little voice left after a successful DOMAINfest Global conference. He sat down with me anyway to discuss DomainSponsor, domains and domain monetization in 2009 and beyond. I bumped-up tha audio a little so that you can hear him.
Sedo buys Revenue Direct
Domain name giant Sedo and parking company RevenueDirect announced today that Sedo has taken over the smaller parking company. The two platforms will continue operating separately for the time being, but I expect that eventually we will see a merger of the back-ends, with Sedo's landing pages predominating. It doesn't make sense economically for them... Continue Reading →
