Source: Thursday, June 2nd, 2011 Dot-Brand: Get Those Applications ReadyLike it or not, brands are heading to the right side of the dot. Next year, top-level domain extensions will evolve beyond .com, .net, .org., .edu and various country codes to include, well, just about anything that a brand, individual, organization, or federal body can think of, snag or pay for. The evolution in domain names, which has been in the works for seven years at the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), the governing body of the Internet, has profound implications for brands. Ben Crawford, CEO of the U.K.-based domain registry, has been pitching a "use it or lose it" message to companies around the world since June 20 is a watershed moment for top-level domain (TLD) extensions. That is when ICANN will initiate the application process for the launch of between 400 and 2,000 new TLDs in keywords (like .sport and .law), cities (like .NYC) and brands. Crawford said that about 54% of clients surveyed by a brand protection agency in the U.K. this year said they would acquire TLD extensions of their brand names. He said several brands -- including Canon, Hitachi, Unicef, and Deloitte -- have said they would do so. As have the cities of Paris, (.Paris) and New York, and the League of Arab States, which has plans to grab ".Arab." Brands should get involved because it lets them unite their services and products, functional areas, promotions locations and sub-brands under one name that consumers can easily recognize. "If I were CMO of, say, MTV, with thousands of Web sites, I can unify them under .MTV, under one family. It helps me build my umbrella brand off of the back of consumer brands people are familiar with, like JerseyShore.MTV." This also makes it harder for counterfeiters, phishers, scammers and other dark-side players to mess with one's brand -- an issue Crawford says is particularly important for luxury brands, and banks: the former deal with a market flooded with fakes and the latter spend millions dealing with consumers who got false pitches. "If you are Barclays, it's as easy as telling consumers that 'it's only Barclays if it says .barclays.'" He says a more relevant risk that should motivate marketers to make their brand names their TLD extensions is that any other registered extension that is "confusingly similar" will make it impossible to do so. "Say the apple farmers union wants .apples, that means .apple is not available. It's not just exact matches." Crawford says the benefits include easy digital vectors to short-term promotions requiring a Web site. With a .brand domain anything goes, as marketers don't have to look for a name that matches the promotion and isn't already taken. "Now when you do promotion, you have to ask if the domain name is available -- it takes that issue out of the equation because every domain name is available if your brand is the extension." Crawford adds that a .brand domain name obviates some ongoing headaches for a few major brands whose names are not their own. The best-known example may be Nissan, which doesn't get to use nissan.com, as the domain has for years been owned by a guy whose business is, apparently, owning nissan.com. Theoretically, that would become a non-issue if Nissan owned .Nissan. Crawford points out that because of the cost and complexity of applying and maintaining a .brand, it is unlikely that just anyone will try to grab a brand. "There is a lot involved. You can't get a top-level domain until you can prove to ICANN that you can manage it." Trademark attorneys have been very active in trying to delay the .brand movement because they say their clients will have to buy thousands of names defensively to protect their brand, according to Crawford. "That's a valid argument. There is awareness at companies but it's in legal and IP protection, not marketing." But he says ICANN has addressed the need for defensive buying of names, as there are new rules that expedite the removal of fraudulent or misleadingly similar names. "At the moment, if someone has a domain name that includes your trademark, you can then go through the arbitration process. If that doesn't work, you can file a complaint. With the new top-level domains, there will be a more rapid takedown policy." He says there will also be "sunrise" periods that give trademark owners the option of buying a domain name before it goes on the open market. |
get the .brand buzz...Etisalat secures top-level domain - TradeArabia.com CentralNic Powers First New Top-Level Domains Announced by ICANN - CircleId.com Expert view: Gavin Brown - dotnxt.com New domain names to break grip of tech giants The End of the Dot-Com Era? - cnbc.com Dot-anything Web domain costs big .$$$ - cnn.com ICANN's Domain Expansion: Why .Metallica Makes Sense - blog.forbes.com Your .brand gTLD: hopeful registry partners go into marketing overdrive - worldtrademarkreview.com How companies are coping with gTLD applications - managingip.com DotBrand Solutions launches in the Middle East DotBrand Solutions in Germany How ICANN's Approval of New Domains Will Change the Web - mashable.com Analysis: New Internet rules will spawn battle for "dots" - reuters.com Forget .com, here's .coke - money.cnn.com Experts clash on benefits of owning and managing .brand domains - v3.co.uk Site Name Broker Preparing for Suffix Explosion Hundreds of dot-brand domains predicted - theregister.com New '.music' web domain worries recording industry - politico.com Marketers debate usefulness of ICANN's new domain names - btobonline.com Drinks firms could profit from internet expansion - just-drinks.com ICANN Approves Custom Generic Top Level Domains - eweek.com ICANN approves top level domain name changes - upi.com ICANN Approves Generic Top Level Domains - enterprisenetworkingplanet.com Here come the domains - bizmology.com Goodbye .Com, Hello .Anything - portfolio.com ICANN Vanity Domains: A Caution for Midmarket Firms - internetevolution.com Top-Level Domains Will Help Web Growth & Reach - yousaytoo.com .Branding: It's the End of the .com World as We Know It - brandchannel.com Dot-Brand: Get those applications ready - mediapost.com Money Radio 1510 Interviews Ben Crawford - New gTLDs: A New Era for Brands on the Internet Are You Ready for .anything? Generic Internet Domains on the Way - pcmag.com Ben Crawford: Why Trademark Owners Are Acquiring Their .Brand TLDs "Defensively" - blog.ud.com A New Era for Internet Domains: Why .XXX Is Just the Beginning - mashable.com Squawk On The Street: Has The Internet Out Grown .Com? - thedomains.com The Big Bang in Domain Names Is Coming - The CMO Site Here Come the .Brand Top Level Domain Names - Domain Name Wire Introducing dot Brand Solutions - Launching Brands into a New Digital Landscape Please direct PR enquiries to our London Headquarters on +44 20 33 88 0600 or via email at info@dotbrandsolutions.com |