How to Register an Expiring Domain
By
Sidney Parfait
Understanding the process and options involved with
registering an expiring domain can be a confusing task. How, Where, When?
This article will explain the basic steps to researching an
expiring domain name, and the many different options (or should I say necessary
steps to insure success).
The normal domain expiration process for .com .net
(domain deletion cycle):
Phase 1. Active Domain
A domain is registered for a time period of 1-10 years.
During this time the domain owner has unrestricted use of the domain.
Phase 2. On-Hold
At the end of this time period, the registrant is required to pay a renewal
fee to the registrar to continue to use the domain. If the domain is renewed go
back to phase 1, if not the domain is placed in an onhold (on-hold) status for
1-45 days (each registrar has determines how long this period lasts). During
this time, the registrant (owner of the domain) can still pay the renewal fee
and continue to use his/her domain name. During this onhold period the domain
resolves to the registrars website or does not resolve at all.
Phase 3. Redemption
After the 1-45 day onhold period, the domain then enters redemption status (RGP
- Redemption grace period), which lasts for 30 days. During this time the
registrant of the domain name has the option to pay a redemption penalty fee
(redemption fees generally cost between $100-200 depending on the registrar) and
renew the domain. If the domain owner renews the domain go back to phase 1.
During this redemption period the domain resolves to the registrars website or
does not resolve at all.
Phase 4. Pending Delete
After the domain completes the 30 day redemption period without being
renewed, it then enters a 5 day pending delete period. During this the time the
registrant no longer has the ability to renew the domain name. The domain will
be released to the general public and be available for registration on the sixth
day at 2pm eastern.
(This drop process does not hold true for exclusive backorders)
Domains are an ever changing industry. Over the last 2 years, many things
have changed including many variations of the domain deletion process. The above
mentioned process is the norm, but every day more and more registrars are
starting to have exclusive drops.
An example of an exclusive drop: A domain is registered with Network
Solutions. The registrant fails to renew the domain within 60 days of the
expiration date. The domain is then auctioned off at snapnames.com (a domain
auction site).
Each registrar has their own time frame for exclusive drops. Current
registrars that are participating in exclusive drops are: network solutions,
godaddy, wild west domains, blue razor, bulk register, dotster, and enom.
Domains registered at network solutions or bulk register must be backordered at
snapnames. Domains registered at godaddy, wild west domains, or blue razor must
be backordered at godaddy or a wild west reseller such as domainut.com. Domains
registered at dotster must be backordered at namewinner Domains registered at
enom must be backordered at club drop (if at least on backorder is placed at the
above services the domain will stay with the original registrar, if no backorder
is placed, the domain will follow the normal drop process) A backorder is the
process of signing up at a drop catching service and making a request to be the
next owner of a domain. The prices at each drop catch service vary. Pool.com -
Backorders start at $60. Pool uses a pay for performance business model. If pool
does not catch the domain when it expires then you are not charged. If you are
the only person that backordered a domain and pool catches it, you are awarded
the domain for $60. If the expired domain was backordered by more than one
person, the domain is then up for private auction. People that backordered the
domain prior to Pool catching it are only allowed to bid in the auction. The
auction lasts for 3 days. SnapNames.com - Backorders start at $60. Snapnames
uses a pay for performance business model. If Snapnames does not catch the
domain when it expires then you are not charged. If you are the only person that
backordered a domain and snapnames catches it, you are awarded the domain for
$60. If the expired domain was backordered by more than one person, the domain
is then up for private auction. People that backordered the domain prior to
snapnames catching it are only allowed to bid in the auction. The auction lasts
for 3 days. Enom Club Drop - Backorder start price is optional$10 or $30. Enom
uses a pay for performance business model. If enom does not catch the domain
when it expires then you are not charged. If you are the only person that
backordered a domain for $10 the domain then goes to public auction, but if you
backordered it for $30 or more and enom catches it, you are awarded the domain.
If the expired domain was backordered for $30 or more by more than one person,
the domain is then up for private auction. The auction lasts for 3 days.
Namewinner.com - Backorders start at $30. Namewinner uses a pay for performance
business model. If namewinner does not catch the domain when it expires then you
are not charged. If you are the only person that backordered a domain and
namewinner catches it, you are awarded the domain for $30. If the expired domain
was backordered by more than one person, the domain is then up for private
auction. People that backordered the domain prior to namewinner catching it are
only allowed to bid in the auction. The auction lasts for 3 days. Godaddy.com or
any Wild West Domains Reseller - $18.95 first come first served (only one person
can place a backorder on any one expiring domain, if or when the domain expires
and godaddy catches it, the backorder holder is awarded the domain.) It is
always best to fully research an expiring domain name. There is no sure fire way
of knowing if a domain will receive traffic, or how much a domain is worth. But
by checking to see how many sites link to a domain (linkpop), how many people
searched for the domain in the previous month (overture with extension), how
many people searched for the terms that make up the domain in the previous month
(overture without the extension), what the google pr is (google page rank), and
what the domain was use for in the past (wayback archive), you can get a rough
idea of how much traffic you should expect.
Once you have completely researched a domain, you should then decide if the
domain is worth backordering at pool or snapname for $60, at enom or namewinner
for $30, at godaddy or a wild west reseller for $18.95, or enom for $10.
Remember to cover all your bases if an expiring domain is worth at least $60 to
you, then backorder at all of the above services. If it is only worth $30, then
backorder at any service that is $30 or cheaper (but remember someone else may
backorder it at the $60 service, and then you have no chance at getting the
expired domain, if you don't have a backorder placed at that service.)
For more tutorials and information by Sidney Parfait, owner of the best
domain resources on the web (StartName.com
ParkingIncome.com and
DropWatch.com)
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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