Monday, August 04, 2008

Buy other web sites: An easy way than SEO to get Web Site Traffic

Every day hundreds of thousands domains are forfeited by their owners who fall short of funds to renew or pay for the registration fees on their expired domains. These sites are eventually deleted and are sent back to the "pool" of unregistered names. Expired domains implore a lot of marketers’ attention because these domains form a new supply of domain names returning to the market. Cashing in on high profile domain names can considerably boost any business on the internet. It initially started as a way to own a good domain name but contemporarily has turned out to be among the most recent ways to propel website's traffic. Every day more than 30,000 domains are registered and 2000 domains expire. Once a domain name expires and is send back to the inventory of unregistered names, it becomes available to be re-registered by anyone. It is more or less like a cat and dog race; the moment it is discarded the battle begins for its monopoly. Contrary to the belief, the domains do not terminate with a great ease. After its stipulated period of expiration, it goes into “expired” status for at least 40 days where its services are called off, but the domain owner may still renew the domain after paying the renewal fee, which is free of any penalty. But if in case the owner does not turns up to claim his domain it is shifted to “redemption period,” where the site is deprived of all Who Is information. Here the renewal charges are subjective to penalty. Subsequent to the redemption period the domain’s status is “locked” and enters the deletion phase. The tenure of the deletion phase is 5 days long, and on the last day the name is officially drop from the ICANN database and is made available for registration by anybody. Whether you want a domain name for your new website, find web sites that already rank high on your keywords and verify the traffic to them to better market your existing site. While new unregistered domain names are tedious to search, the expired domain lists are a better option. You can visit http://www.networksolutions.com/whois/index.jhtml to get registration information on millions of domain names with many different extensions, irrespective of where they are registered

1 Comments:

At 4:08 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Natalie,

Liked this article, I did not know about the "“expired” status for at least 40 days" which the domain goes to.

Harold

 

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