Tags :
Buying Expired Domain Names
Buying Expired Domain Names
Buying Expired Domain Names by Ronald
W. Firquain
Whenever you encounter a popular name online, attached to a dot com
or dot net, you might be wondering when you can one day get enough
financial clout to put up your own immensely famous web company.
With a dot com or dot net address that is easy to recall, you can
have visitors flocking to your website easily, potential customers
looking for a good deal on your products and services, and
ordinary, run of the mill Internet surfers just curious to see what
you are all about.
Not all dot com or dot net addresses last forever. When companies
move out of the Internet and find new business opportunities to
sink their teeth into, they can leave their domain name hanging.
Along with this domain name is a built in market: because a large
number of people have been going to the domain name and its
adjoining website for so long, an expired domain name literally has
its own market hanging on to it. With a lot of traffic, you can
have a potential website waiting for you to create it.
Note, however, that domains do not simply expire and run into the
next highest bidder arms. When a domain name passes its expiration
date, it rests in a forty day static period, where the current
owner of the domain name can still re enter it into a domain name
registry. After forty days of not being touched, the domain then
goes into a thirty five day period where the owner can still re
enter it into a domain name registry, but for a much higher fee
than when it was offered. After all these grace periods, the domain
has finally expired, and the next owner can be you.
You can look for expired, or soon to expire domain names in domain
registries online, which can advertise which domain names may soon
be up for grabs. When you finally get that expired domain name, you
have to get down to business. Because you have a constantly flowing
market that goes with the domain name, you are pressed for time to
create a new website that this market will go to when they type the
old domain name into their web browser address bar. If the domain
name is related to a site that you already maintain, then you can
redirect it to your site and have all the traffic run over to your
side of the Web universe.
If you must create a new website, do so within twenty four to forty
eight hours of purchasing the expired domain name. You do not have
to create a site heavy with graphics or animation: you need five or
more pages of useful content that can contain information relevant
to the domain name, and useful to the website visitor. Prepare to
meet this incoming traffic head on by enrolling in affiliate
programs and posting your AdSense ads in strategic places in your
new website.
When creating a new website, follow all the rules of good web
design. Make sure that your text contrasts well with your
background without straining the eyes of your visitors. Avoid
putting too many graphics or animation that can slow your site down
when it loads into the browsers of your website visitors. Make sure
that your site is secure enough to accept payments from your buyers
should you offer products or services online. Lastly, make sure
that you have well-written content that you can update regularly,
keeping your readers coming back for more.
These are only a few tips in correctly using expired domain names.
Be on the lookout for expired domain names by updating yourself
constantly. Do research on popular domain names and web content
that you can work on. You, too, can earn money, web traffic, and
online fame, if you have enough mettle and know how.
Ronald Firquain is a writer, marketer, entrepreneur, webmaster and
has 16 years of computer knowledge. You can download e-books for
making money online, building a website, improve your golf game,
playing guitar and much more. For more information go to: eBooks Mall
Article Directory: Article Dashboard
