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The key piece for us at Future Now is how GoDaddy's ads only drove half the traffic they did last year. The result? Twice the revenue boost as compared to last year's ads. Why? Because traffic does NOT equal money.
Bob Parsons wrote an interesting piece in AdFreak about this, which spurred us to blog about why GoDaddy had more success with this years ads even though the ads were measurably far worse.
Last year, GoDaddy failed to create anything sticky. No tape whatsoever. Fortunately, we'd blogged about their poor planning last year, and were able to make a quick case study out of it on our blog (click my name to check it out).
They use pretty much their standard interface for resellers. If you call tech support (480)505-8877 it is WildWest Domain.
I think the only thing thats sets Godaddy apart are rock bottom prices and their super bowl ads with the girl.
The tech support is WildWest and they can be good or bad (like anywhere else) depending on the experience of your support agent.
More GoDaddy Frustration
http://www.threadwatch.org/node/5542
Godaddy abuse department strikes again
http://www.threadwatch.org/node/5167
Godaddy Holding Customer Sites to Ransom?
http://www.threadwatch.org/node/3785
All respect to your opinion, and it's great you've had a wonderful experience with them. But they're the last registrar I'd recommend.
Boris - GoDaddy owns WildWest and uses that sister company as it's reseller division of GoDaddy.
First of all, their cookies are all screwed up, so that they never correctly remember my log in information. And if I don't remember it correctly, after one or two log in attempts it locks my account without telling me. The only way to unlock it is to contact customer support. After about 24 hours, a robot then sends you instructions to email them the last four digits of your credit card, and then 48 hours later they unlock your account.
You'd think I should remember my passwords. I do. And I let Firefox remember them too. FireFox remembers them just fine for any of the other two dozen sites for which I have it save username and password info.
What if you have a hot domain you either need to renew before you lose it, or a domain that just became available that you need to buy? Tough luck.
If you're looking for good customer service, my advice is to avoid Godaddy. If you're just looking for cheap domains and don't mind their clunky web site and customer service frustration, then they're fine.
...</pingback>
The fact is that most companies have annoyed a customer at one time or another, especially companies the size of GoDaddy. And while this should be minimized at every cost, I think one has to exercise discretion before writing off a business who has had only a few problems with customers.
When you're talking about that kind of volume, I think it's safe to say 99% of their customers have been satisfied. Those odds are fine with me, and falling into that 1% is just the gamble I make.
I do get a little bogged down with Bob Parson's marketing approach. Maybe he's got a thing with sex that I don't really care to explore.
But you can't knock their service, their security or the ease of use of their site. And it's great to have competent phone support when it's needed.
I've heard good things about Bluehost and Lunar pages. I don't know enough about their service, but the packages they offer are great both in terms of features and price. In the end, it's almost always the service provided when you need help that sets one apart from another.
Experience 1 - I was told by Godaddy I would lose all my domains if I didn't pay $200 because someone sent a spam email with my domain in it. Even though they don't host me. I told them that the thousands I've spent on domains is good enough and haven't heard since.
Experience 2 - I was called by Godaddy because a bunch of domains were about to expire, and they gave me a special price to renew as many domains as I wanted for as long as I wanted, even ones that weren't expiring for a few years.
So there is the good and the bad but overall I've had good experiences (except with the abuse department, which thinks they own the internet)