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NFC & AFC Champions: Generic Domain Names

7

The AFC Championship and NFC Championship games were played tonight, pitting the New York Jets against the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Chicago Bears against the Green Bay Packers.

The NY Jets use NewYorkJets.com for its website and the Pittsburgh Steelers simply use Steelers.com.

The Chicago Bears use ChicagoBears.com and the Green Bay Packers simply use Packers.com.

As you are probably aware, the two teams with the team name .com domain names won their respective conference championship. The Super Bowl that will be played in Dallas will feature a matchup of Steelers(.com) vs. Packers(.com).

If only the Dallas Cowboys had acquired Cowboys.com…. although they still can by using Sedo.

Dallas Cowboys Fumble Domain Name on Big Day for News as Coach Phillips is Fired

A few days ago I wrote about the Cowboys.com domain name going up for sale on Sedo, brokered by Dave Evanson. This came three years after the Cowboys infamously bid and won the Cowboys.com domain name at auction, but they didn’t complete the deal after apparently confusing the price, thinking the winning bid was $275.00 rather than the actual $275,000.00.

Apparently the Dallas Cowboys suffered another domain name  embarrassment today. It looks like the Cowboys didn’t renew its DallasCowboys.com domain name on time, and as a result, the default Network Solutions landing page is currently showing (complete with pictures of young soccer players).

This afternoon, the Cowboys fired coach Wade Phillips after their horrendous 1-7 start to the season. I am sure a lot of people turned to DallasCowboys.com (and probably Cowboys.com, too) to learn more about the firing, directly from the team. Unfortunately for them, they were disappointed in the Cowboys once again.

The good news is that the Cowboys appear to have renewed the domain name through 2020, and the domain name should soon  propagate  back to its website. The bad news is that the Cowboys will still be bad whether the website works or doesn’t.

Confirmed: MLB Acquires Angels.com

The Angels.com domain name has been purchased by Major League Baseball, and Angels.com now redirects to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim website. The domain name was purchased at the end of August for $200,000 at a Sedo auction.

In my opinion, this was a smart acquisition for the baseball team, and it was a smart sale for the owner, who hasn’t been able to monetize the traffic that was presumably mostly looking for tickets, baseball gear, and other baseball related products. In 2007, Major League Baseball filed a UDRP for Angels.com, but they lost the decision. According to an article written by Andrew, the team was offered the opportunity to purchase the domain name back then for around $300,000.

As you can see from a prior post about sports team domain name, most professional sports teams (and leagues) understand the value of owning the team .com domain name. (Big exception: Dallas Cowboys who still down’t own Cowboys.com).

According to the most recent Whois update, the domain name is owned by MLB Advanced Media, LP, and the domain name is registered at Corporation Service Company.

Do Sports Teams Get Domain Names?

NBA, NFL, MLB, NHL

I want to examine whether American professional sports teams seem to value generic domain names for their websites. Surprisingly, there are a whole host of sports teams that do not own the exact keyword .com domain name of their brand, even though they are losing a considerable amount of traffic as a result. I searched NHL, NBA, MLB, and NFL team websites, and I found that National Basketball Association teams own the most team name.com domain names, and National Hockey League teams owns the least.

Since most sports team names are very generic, they are expensive to acquire. However, losing ticket sales and team memorabilia/collectibles revenue (or having to pay a commission for them) should be incentive enough to spend the money to buy these domain names, as evidenced by the purchase of Bobcats.com by the NBA’s Charlotte Bobcats last year.

By nature, American Internet users seem to default to the .com domain name when looking for a specific brand, and that holds true for sports teams. This can be witnessed by examining the public stats of generic sports domain names during the season. For example, Dolphins.com seems to spike at the beginning of the football season and then in the middle, even though the Miami Dolphins didn’t own the domain name until a recent UDRP filing that was Suspended.

It’s interesting to note that it doesn’t appear that the league or team values have anything to do with the acquisition of generic .com domain names. The Dallas Cowboys are one of the three most valuable American professional sports franchises. Yet they weren’t willing to pay $275,000 for their generic .com domain name when it was up for auction (which is a story in and of itself).

According to reports in Forbes Magazine, the approximate combined value of teams in each league were: NFL: $30.6 billion, MLB: $14.5 billion, NBA: $11.4 billion,   and NHL: $6.6 billion. This doesn’t parallel the % of teams that own their own .com domain name, although the least valuable league does own the least amount of .com domain names.

Percentage of teams that own their .com team name:
NBA: 76.7%
MLB: 73.3%
NFL: 53.1%
NHL: 26.7%

National Hockey League Teams – Do they own team name .com?
Buffalo Sabres Yes
Carolina Hurricanes No
Colorado Avalanche No
Columbus Blue Jackets No
Dallas Stars No
Detroit Red Wings No
Edmonton Oilers No
Florida Panthers No
Los Angeles Kings No
Minnesota Wild Yes
Montreal Canadiens Yes
Nashville Predators No
New Jersey Devils No
New York Islanders No
New York Rangers No
Ottawa Senators Yes
Philadelphia Flyers No
Phoenix Coyotes No
Pittsburgh Penguins No
San Jose Sharks No
St. Louis Blues No
Tampa Bay Lightning No
Toronto Maple Leafs Yes
Vancouver Canucks Yes
Washington Capitals No

National Basketball League Teams – Do they own team name .com?
Atlanta Hawks Yes
Boston Celtics Yes
Charlotte Bobcats Yes
Chicago Bulls Yes
Cleveland Cavaliers No
Dallas Mavericks No
Denver Nuggets Yes
Detroit Pistons Yes
Golden State Warriors Yes
Houston Rockets Yes
Indians Pacers Yes
LA Clippers Yes
LA Lakers Yes
Memphis Grizzlies Yes
Miami Heat Yes
Milwaukee Bucks Yes
Minnesota Timberwolves Yes
New Jersey Nets No
New Orleans Hornets Yes
New York Knicks Yes
Oklahoma City Thunder No
Orlando Magic No
Philadelphia 76ers Yes
Phoenix Suns Yes
Portland Trail Blazers Yes
Sacramento Kings Yes
San Antonio Spurs Yes
Toronto Raptors Yes
Utah Jazz No
Washington Wizards No

National Football League Teams – Do they own team name .com?
Arizona Cardinals No
Atlanta Falcons No
Baltimore Ravens No
Buffalo Bills No
Carolina Panthers Yes
Chicago Bears No
Cincinnati Bengals Yes
Cleveland Browns No
Dallas Cowboys No
Denver Broncos No
Detroit Lions No
Green Bay Packers Yes
Houston Texans No
Indianapolis Colts Yes
Jacksonville Jaguars Yes
Kansas City Chiefs No
Miami Dolphins Yes
Minnesota Vikings Yes
New England Patriots Yes
New Orleans Saints No
New York Giants Yes
New York Jets No
Oakland Raiders Yes
Philadelphia Eagles No
Pittsburgh Steelers Yes
San Diego Chargers Yes
San Francisco 49ers Yes
Seattle Seahawks Yes
St Louis Rams Yes
Tampa Bay Buccaneers Yes
Tennessee Titans No
Washington Redskins Yes

Major League Baseball Teams – Do they own team name .com?
Arizona Diamondbacks Yes
Atlanta Braves Yes
Baltimore Orioles Yes
Boston Red Sox Yes
Chicago Cubs Yes
Chicago White Sox Yes
Cincinnati Reds Yes
Cleveland Indians Yes
Colorado Rockies No
Detroit Tigers Yes
Florida Marlins Yes
Houston Astros Yes
Kansas City Royals Yes
Los Angeles Angels No
Los Angeles Dodgers Yes
Milwaukee Brewers Yes
Minnesota Twins No
New York Mets Yes
New York Yankees Yes
Oakland Athletics No
Philadelphia Phillies Yes
Pittsburgh Pirates Yes
San Diego Padres Yes
San Francisco Giants No
Seattle Mariners Yes
St. Louis Cardinals No
Tampa Bay Rays No
Texas Rangers No
Toronto Blue Jays Yes
Washington Nationals Yes

5 With… Rick Schwartz, CEO, T.R.A.F.F.I.C.

rick-schwartz.jpgRick Schwartz is a visionary in the domain investment business. From the mid-90’s when he was registering premium generic domain names to more recently with speculative .mobi names, Rick has been at the forefront of the domain industry, taking risks that almost always seem to pay off. In an industry where many of the top professionals remain secretive (less so now than before), Rick  has been  one of the few people willing to speak out. Because of his outspoken nature, Rick is a frequent target of naysayers, but he continues to dedicate countless hours to advance the domain industry.

Rick Schwartz, aka “Domain King” and “Webfather”, is the CEO, President and Cofounder of T.R.A.F.F.I.C., the premiere domain conference for the domain industry. It is both the oldest and largest and attracts over 500 of the top professionals in the industry in a by invitation only event. With 9 shows in just 3 years TRAFFIC has established itself as the epicenter of the entire domain industry. It has attracted speakers from Ben Stein to Steve Forbes.

As one of the early domain pioneers dating back to 1995, Rick has a knack for predicting big trends and getting it right. He may have been the first to recognize the value of “Type in” traffic which is now commonly referred to as “Direct navigation” – the most potent and targeted traffic on the net. Rick has a prime portfolio of one and two word domains, and is considered by many to be among the leading experts on domain names, traffic, website flow and valuation.

Besides eRealEstate.com and domains like Candy.com, Property.com, Properties.com, Tradeshows.com, Widgets.com and some 5000 others, Rick is also a founding member and sits on the board of the ICA. (Internet Commerce Association) a non -profit organization which is actively looking after and protecting the rights of domain owners..

Rick sold Men.com for $1.3 million in cash deal that was finalized in May 2004, a domain name that he bought for $15,000 in 1997. Many attribute that sale to jump starting the domain space at a time considered the lowest point the domain business has seen. It also cemented his main theory that “Domains would go up faster in value than any commodity or asset ever known to mankind.” Laughed at in 1995 and 1996 it is FACT today. No stock, no land, no gold, no jewel has ever gone up faster and further in value.

1.) EJS: Development seems to be one of the “hot topics” at recent TRAFFIC conferences, and you’ve indicated that you will be developing some of your domain names. What names in your portfolio are at the top of the line for development, and what type of development options are you considering?

RS: “I think Property.com, Candy.com and Widgets.com are the ones that are ripest for development. I have been in discussions with companies on two of these domains. However nothing concrete at this point. Like most things, it all is about the timing. iReport.com is also high on my list. I have experimented with other development. RumorMill.com for one. But development does not automatically mean more revenue. RumorMill.com will likely morph into another type site and be a PPC page during the transition. What most people don’t realize is I had developed sites in 1996 and 1997 when I still had my real world businesses. I have also developed sites that just stay in orbit and I even forget I have them.. eRealestate.com was one of my early sites and I have left much of that largely as a time capsule with only some obvious updates. But most of what was written there came from 1996-1999. I have about 10 other developed sites that I don’t talk much about. As the net matures, matching a great domain name with a profitable formula for development will become easier

Which is why parking pages are so popular. You may collect a little less but you tied up zero time and that alone has value. So every time you discuss development, it circles back to 100% automation. Parking = 0 minutes per month. Development = much more time per month. Eventually there will be some other options as businesses realize just how potent type in traffic is. No matter how you cut it and how well folks think they are doing the fact is the traffic domains produce is worth 10x the current payout rate and sometimes much much more. When the true value of traffic is fully exploited then you will see payouts explode. 2 cent visitors will be worth $20 or $200 or more. What kind of an increase is that? What does that do to the price of domain names with targeted type in traffic? And as parking pages get more sophisticated they will begin to capture data and email addresses and do mail outs and do other things to aid in developing databases of buyers. So development may not be what we expect it to be and it sure as hell is not easy to develop AND be profitable. But like solving the Rubix Cube….we keep trying.. And when folks laugh at those payouts above, they will just show their lack of vision. If I have somebody looking for a $1 million property and I hand delver them to the agent that could make a $60,000 commission, you going to tell me that is worth 2 CENTS?? 2 DOLLARS. $200?? BS! I would rather sell him a 25 cent piece of candy for that 2 cents or just give the visitor to charity. But when the DAY comes that the Realtor says you can make me $60k and I can pay you THOUSANDS for that lead….THEN you will see what a visitor is REALLY worth.. And if a domain can produce just 10 of those people a year, what is the value of that domain? We will laugh when we look back at this period of pennies. Wait until they actually figure it out. How can I be so sure? 2+2 =4. Just because we are in a time in which they have not figured out that 2+2 =4 does not mean WE have to change anything. 2=2 IS 4 and when they figure it out our job is to just be there waiting and the key ingredient is patience. So overpaying for a domain today is still a HUGE bargain when you look down the road and see what I believe will unfold.”

2.) EJS: You paid a record sum of $200,000 for Flowers.mobi, yet the website isn’t mobile-compatible. What are your plans for that domain name?

“Like other investments including dotcom, you have to overpay today to have a bargain tomorrow. I repeat that often because that is one of the foundations of my approach to business. While others are so focused on a bargain, they miss the prize.

.mobi is not relevant today so no need to waste time, money and energy developing. I think .mobi is a play for 3-5 years down the road. It will either hit big or won’t hit at all. That is what speculation is all about. Those that laugh at .mobi remind me of the folks that called me a fool when I bought domains in 1996 and 1997 and paid $100 to register each one. Nobody can definitely predict the future. But you take a calculated risk that may or may not payoff. It’s a risk. You don’t like risk, then put your $$$ in a savings account and make 5%. No risk, but you will watch your buying power shrink away. Some risks pay off. Some don’t. You always have to be prepared to lose your investment if you expect a big payday sometime down the road. It’s about diversification as well. .mobi is a spin of the roulette wheel. Nothing more, nothing less. I have had damn good luck at roulette. If you come to Las Vegas TRAFFIC I’ll show you how you “Hit them hard and hit them fast” and walk away a winner more often than not. I would just rather gamble on domains than roulette.”

3.) EJS: The Dallas Cowboys own DallasCowboys.com, and were nearly the owners of Cowboys.com for a price of $275,000 after the TRAFFIC live auction. The name eventually sold for over $370,000 in the silent auction. What made this name more enticing to purchase during the silent auction than during the live auction when only a single bid was placed?

RS: “I think domainers were apprehensive of the Dallas football team coming after them. There is a history of corporate lawyers that target domain owners and try and reverse hijack generic domain names whether they have any true right to them or not. When the team willingly backed out of their contact at the auction it left the door wide open for that not to happen. Further, the Dallas Cowboys came out so publicly that they were the :DALLAS Cowboys and not the “Cowboys” that gave domainers the confidence to obtain the domain and complete the transaction without fear of repercussions. I don’t speak for the group. They may each have their own takes. This is just how I saw it. Should they ever decide to come after us, I think it would be the perfect case for the public to see. We could even lose the domain when you consider the inconsistency of past rulings. However someone else would lose much more. America’s team would risk that title. Cowboys.com is a generic name. We can keep it an apparel site. We can morph it into a dating site. We can sell saddles if we want. Yes, there would be ways to sell things related to the Dallas Cowboys football team. Probably in excess of 7 or 8 figures a year. But the way the Internet is set up, it does not follow real world rules. So opportunities like that can not be realized without a formal licensing agreement. Being #1 is a great thing. There are only 2 things that can keep you #1. Winning and more sales. We can’t help the Dallas Cowboys win more games, but we sure as hell could add more sales to things they might sell in their stores.

Again, I am speaking from my own personal thoughts and this is not related to the official positions of Cowboys.com LLC in which I am just 1 of 18 or 20.”

4.) EJS: You take a lot of heat from other people in the domain space for nearly every public action you do. What motivates you to continue to be a public figure in the domain business, when you could easily sell out, retire and live a relaxed and quiet life?

RS: “You can’t please everybody. I feel like Joe Torre sometimes. You have one victory after another, year after year and they still want to throw your ass out to the curb. It’s just a human nature thing. So you just do what you think is right and make the best decisions you can by conferring with a large cross section of people and companies and listen to what they say and try and find the direction that moves us all forward.

The best way to take the heat and dispel the nonsense you hear on the boards is having a great success followed by a great success followed by other great successes. At some point when you have a long string of successes over several decades dating back to the 70’s, you can no longer just point to luck. Luck sure helps but it just might also be by design. It just might be having a different formula and vision. It just might be marching to the beat of a different drummer. It just might be that you are so devoted and so dedicated that failure is not an option even though I have no fear of failure. Failure is just a clue in having a great success. (My entire last blog was about failure)

I love this industry. The potential is stronger than anything I have seen in my lifetime. It needs to be exploited and publicized because keeping the industry a secret helps only a few. I have a mission. In a few years I will ride into the sunset knowing I had a major impact in lives of many. That’s a pretty cool feeling. It’s all on record and I will let history and fair minded people sort it all out. We are on an historical mission. It will be written about in history books as we were taught about the gold rush and other epic events. We will all be dead when that happens, but it does not diminish the reality and our place in history.”

5.) EJS: If for some crazy reason some world Internet body ruled that each person was only permitted to own one domain name and you were forced to sell all but one, which would you keep, what would you do with it, and why did you choose that one?

RS: “It is possible extreme actions like this that should have every domain owner supporting the ICA. Believe me, many would like to do exactly that. The ones that blew it and missed the greatest opportunity in their lifetimes will spend YEARS figuring out ways to get our assets. It is cheaper to chip away at our rights with tiny and hidden legislation than to actually pay fair market value of our assets I am going to fight them so I never am forced to answer that question. It will take every domain owner fighting those organizations and lobbyists that will try and re-write law and capitalism in an effort to take title to what we discovered and own. What we took great risks in obtaining. Then we need to publicize exactly which companies are engaged in this type activity and expose them. Some companies may actually be in our space.”

***Bonus Questions!!

6.) EJS: Have you ever regretted selling (or buying) a domain name? If so, which and why?

RS: “Never regretted buying a domain name, but it is hard to part with any. Guess that is why I have only sold about 6 even though I get thousands of offers annually. There will always be an invisible link that is hard to explain once a domain has been in your possession. I think you follow it like a teacher would follow the career of a student. You know you played some small part in their evolution and destiny.”

7.) EJS: The domain business can be a 24/7 operation and can certainly take a toll on your health, family life and social life among other things. How do you escape from the domain world to relax, recover and re-energize?

RS: “First of all it is a hobby and it is fun and I love the daily challenge as well as seeing the future from the front row. So it is hard to escape something you love and look forward to every day when you wake up. I just basically do it in different places at different times and that way my life comes first without forsaking the business or family. So the freedom to be writing this on a 3lb Sony with a wireless connection from wherever I happen to be allows me to re-energize on a continuous basis. Then God created the iPhone and it brought it all together. Now I understand why there are 60 second traffic lights. You can check your email. Check the news, the board, the stocks. Respond to an email and still have time to tune in channel 7 on Sirius or XM Radio. ”

8.) EJS: You own one of the most valuable private domain portfolios. Would you trade your entire portfolio for anything, and if so what?

RS: “I think we all have our “Number” in which we would sell for. I am not looking to sell, but if somebody gave me my “Number”, I might be on my way.

Can I trade for health? Happiness? A few extra days on earth? In that case I will consider cash. Sure, we all have “Our number” in which if someone wrote the check, we would take a hike. No matter what business you have or what asset you own, we all have that “NUMBER” running around in the back of our minds. But even if we get that “Number”, I doubt I would do things much different. I would always own some of my favorite domain names. I actually may do better focusing on a handful as opposed to many.”

Domain Investors “Cowboy Up”

After the TRAFFIC auction ended and the dust settled, Cowboys.com was again for sale in the silent auction. A large group of domain investors from Rick Schwartz’s private Targeted Traffic Forum formed a group and made the winning bid for Cowboys.com. The background story can be found by clicking here.

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