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It's good for businesses to stay on top of this. Sometimes a designer isn't malicious, but may forget to transfer a domain, etc. Yours and Peter's advice is sound and important for any person getting a site developed.
I run a hosting company and we too come across clients like this all the time. Unfortunately, domain registration either confuses most people or they don't understand the importance of being the Registrant so they don't think about it until it is too late and they have a problem.
My principal business involves a CPA tax practice doing lots of S corporation and LLC tax returns and tax planning for high net worth entrepreneurs. And let's just say that's worth "X". My CPA web site generates, like, .25X of new, repeat revenue a year. Which means it's probably worth even more than my web site.... or at least close to what my web site is worth.
So my web site *is* a significant component of my business.
Another angle here... I love working with offshore designers. I love www.elance.com. I've had nothing but good experiences.
And getting back to offshore resources, the service and expertise is great... and the economics are pretty darn good. But it's a little scary to be giving some, e.g., Egyptian designer ftp access to your web site.
DISCLAIMER: I am absolutely *not* making some xynophobic comment about Egyptian web site designers. (One guy who contacted me was obviously very talented!) But working with some half way round the world, well, hey, you wonder.
And just to be fair, I have no problem with that Egyptian designer wondering, worrying about me...
But, heck, you've got this really important thing... and it's pretty vulnerable...
Stephen L. Nelson, CPA
Author, QuickBooks for Dummies
www.stephenlnelson.com
Today, the domain just points to a GoDaddy landing page.
Business.com – $7.5 million
AsSeenOnTv.com – $5.1 million
Altavista.com – $3.3 million
Wine.com – $2.9 million
Autos.com – $2.2 million
I am not sure how such an investment – paying millions of USD for a simple name – can be recovered and used to produce profit. There was a story about Coca-Cola, which said that if the company lost all its infrastructure, but kept the name and brand characteristics, it could bounce back in about 4 years. However, if the company managers were left with all the infrastructure, but lost the Coca-Cola name, the company would be very likely to go bankrupt. Do you think this is also true for domain names?
Regards,
Michael Rad
The primary point here is that for the small business - I'm not talking about Coke or Autos.com (2.2 million was a steal)
I'm talking about the small business that can't really stand the frustration, time and effort that it might take to replace a domain name or have a web site down for a month.
This is particularly true of sites that are starting to generate some nice traffic and search results. Having to start from scratch because you didn't have control of your domain name is a little like giving your keys to your office to someone and hoping they show up to meet you for work each day.
Excellent advice, and thanks for promoting an AZ-based company. Having Go Daddy in town is a huge assett to the Phoenix-area. Heck, they were even in town before Google!
That being said, any reputable, honest and integrity-driven web/blog developer/designer should be 100% up-front with their clients regarding the ABCs of web hosting, domains, etc. so the correct decsions are made at the outset.
www.merchantcircle.com/corporate/blog/2006/05/s...
If you turn this over to an organization that already has a lot of control like the Yellow Pages, you are opening yourself up to a lot of “abuse” later on.
Last week, John Jantsch at Duct Tape Marketing brought up a very good point that if you own a website you should have control over your domain name. It sounds obvious, but many website owners don’t. With that said, here are three important lesson...</trackback>
Thanks, John, for prompting me to talk about this with the nonprofit organizations I work with on e-communications. I've put a link to a useful Technology Inventory Worksheet produced by TechSoup on my blog today. It should work well for small businesses, too--and it's free.
Links Here | Tag:Web Marketing
A couple of days ago I wrote a post about securing the control of your domain name. This post sparked a lot great comments including one from Dalene Bradford who writes Charitable Thoughts - a blog focused on ...</pingback>