Performancing Metrics

ICM Registry

Lessons from an Unlikely Place

We largely focus on brand owners here on the gTLD Strategy blog – how brand owners will be affected by new gTLDs, how those brand owners that applied for new gTLDs can effectively integrate them into their digital strategies, etc. But all told, strategic companies were only a portion of the total pool of new gTLD applicants. By FairWinds’ calculations, approximately one-third of all new gTLDs applied for were brand names. When you strip out the duplicates, brand names make up about half of the total group of potential future gTLD strings.

The other half of applied-for gTLDs are generic terms and geographic terms, both in English and other Latin script-based languages as well as languages that use non-Latin alphabets like Cyrillic, Arabic, or Japanese. And while applicants’ motivations for applying for new gTLDs were diverse and varied, we have to remember that for many, applying for a new gTLD was the first step in a new business venture built around selling domain name registrations.

This week’s Daily Beast article about the financial success of .XXX highlights this point well. With just short of 230,000 domain names sold within a year – some through traditional registration and other, high-value domains sold through auction – ICM Registry, the company that operates .XXX, is on track to make nearly $200 million this year.

It’s success stories like these that have undoubtedly driven many new gTLD applicants to apply for their own little slice of Internet real estate. Of course, .XXX is not the only gTLD to have launched since ICANN first opened up the space in 2000. And for all the financial success of .XXX, there are other gTLDs that have languished, or never really took off in the first place.

So what was the secret to .XXX’s success, at least compared to other recently launched new gTLDs? A large part has to do with its focus – not because it focuses on adult content specifically, but because it has a clearly delineated focus. The public understands what .XXX is for, what kind of content they’re likely to find there, and what kind of message it would convey if they were to register a .XXX domain name and use and promote that domain name. Other new gTLDs launched in the past have suffered from that lack of clarity. By remaining completely open and undefined, they attempted to compete with what most people recognize as the “default” gTLD, .COM – and they failed.

This actually bodes well for new gTLD applicants. The message is pretty clear: if you have a clear strategy for how your gTLD will be used and can clearly communicate that strategy to Internet users, they will be more comfortable with and quicker to adopt your gTLD. This doesn’t just apply to gTLD applicants who plan to sell domains, either. For brand owners who are seeking to engage with their customers through their gTLD, these lessons apply equally.

ICANN Armageddon or Much Ado about Nothing? – Manwin v. ICM and ICANN

Some readers may remember hearing about a court ruling from last month that made some waves in the domain name space. The Central District of California District Court ruled that the lawsuit filed by Manwin Licensing, the owner of YouPorn.com against ICM Registry, the operator of the .XXX gTLD, could proceed, indicating that ICANN is subject to U.S. antitrust laws. Many assumed that this ruling would mean that new generic-term gTLDs would be subject to antitrust laws, and therefore would be open to antitrust lawsuits. FairWinds’ Counsel Steve Levy weighs in on this topic in a special post below. (more...)

Pre-Reveal Day Sneak Peek

We may not know precisely when ICANN will finally publish the full list of new gTLD applications and applicants, but we do know that it will be at least a month from now. And certain companies have come forward over the past few weeks, announcing that they are applying for certain new gTLDs. So while we’ll have to sit tight for the full list, we at least have a small sneak peak of a few of the 2,100+ applications we’ll see on Reveal Day. Here’s what we’re looking at so far: (more...)

Overwhelming Demand: Update on the Sunrise B Period for .XXX

ICM Registry, the company administering the .XXX top-level domain, has announced that it received 78,938 applications during the Sunrise B Period, which ended on Monday, October 31st. During the Sunrise B Period, trademark holders from outside the adult entertainment industry had the opportunity to preemptively register their trademarks in order to block them from being registered as .XXX domains. (Sunrise A gave trademark owners within the adult industry the opportunity to register domains before ICM opens the .XXX floodgates to the general public.) Given the overwhelming response, ICM and its IP Rights validation company will likely be processing the trademarks and applications through the end of November. As such, the results of the Sunrise B period will not be available until early December. (more...)