Social Media Revolution Will Be .Tel-evised
Dotster Kicks Off .tel General Availability, Welcoming Digital Nomads Home
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Telsters may be sold on the idea of this gigantic and universal directory but there are skeptics who are doubtful about the potential of this domain extension. So how do we make dot-tel the next big winner in the domain industry? It really isn’t that difficult to make this extension the next big news to create headlines. What is needed is just a few big hits and dot-tel is ready to soar.
Dot-Tel for the Youth
The youngsters are the biggest trendsetters of all times. Hey how did the Beatles get to become rich and famous back in the 60’s? How did Britney Spears or Beyonce get to be the next big thing in the music industry? How did MySpace and FaceBook became an Internet giant? Do you remember how Pizza Hut or Kentucky Fried Chicken gained worldwide popularity? What about the success that Starbucks enjoys? Do you see the trend here? If dot-tel can become the next “cool”: thing, then this domain extension will be the next big winner. The marketing efforts of this domain extension would ideally target towards this group.
Support from Wireless Companies
If the various wireless companies and the big names in the industry would facilitate the use of this domain extension though wireless browsing of dot-tel domains through the network, it would help a lot in establishing dot-tel as a viable and acceptable standard for communication. Obviously the wireless companies must be able to reap a substantial reward form this trend to be able to invest in the development of this domain extension. An endorsement from iPhone and/or Blackberry would be a major boost to help increase the acceptance and popularity of this domain extension.
Unique Services
This is the time for telsters to let the creative energies ruin wild. If new and unique services that have never been seen before are introduced using dot-tel domains, the next big hit telsters have been waiting for could occur. This is especially true if these services are only made possible through the dot-tel platform and virtually impossible with other top level domains. It would mean the ultimate breakthrough telsters are anxious to see. As more and more people jump onto the dot tel bandwagon, the creative nature of these collective minds will soon come up with a dazzling new idea that will take the domain industry by storm.
Waiting for the next big break can be a rather passive thing to do for telsters worldwide. Being a part of the change is a more proactive approach to meet this new challenge head on. Rather than waiting for someone else to discover the next big thing to hit the industry, why not be the one who creates the next revolution with a totally new and awesome service. Like anything brand new, Dot-tel has the potential to be the next big winner.
Innovating with dot-tel and managing your dot-tel for the purpose of monetizing it is a challenge that is not suited for the closed-minded or those who are stubborn in their ways. The best dot-tel applications will be services that no one had even conceived until dot-tel surfaced. Dot-tel has the ability to create innovations by forcing people to think differently, innovations that would not have happened without dot-tel. If you are not a creative developer you definitely do NOT want to buy a dot-tel domain.
Dot-tel is not meant to be “yet another TLD”. If that is what you are looking for, you won’t find it in a dot-tel. Dot-tel provides a service that is new to the Internet and makes use of the network in a previously unexplored way. This new way does not rely on any one platform to serve it’s purpose. Dot-tel domains are meant to build upon what exists today on the Internet and also for what will come in the future.
If you are an innovator, you shouldn’t buy A dot-tel domain, as in one. You’re probably going to want more than one. And you might not want JUST the dot-tel domain. You might want to put some sort of web-based interaction with your dot-tel domains, so if you do, a complimentary dot-com wouldn’t hurt. You could manage your dot-tel empire from a different location if you wanted to though. Maybe your own server, maybe your desktop or maybe even from your palmtop. Dot-tel offers the potential for all of these possibilities and more. But if you would rather stick strictly to web sites, then definitely don’t buy a dot-tel.
The elegance of dot-tel is freedom from the burdens imposed by other “standard” technologies. If your dot-tel based service can benefit from a web-based interface, then you can build it. If your dot-tel application is never to see the light of the World Wide Web, then you have no need for web servers, browsers, scripts, etc. Dot-tel gives you freedom to create and build anything you want using the Internet as your data store, delivery system and hub. Those who access your dot-tel can access it anyway they want, from their desktop, laptop, palmtop, settop, etc.
Dot-tel is meant to foster the creation of services rather than creating another slew of parked pages that don’t really accomplish much for surfers beyond redirecting them. You can’t park dot-tel domains so you are forced to actually use them. Whether that use be for building a directory or something else, at least when a surfer goes to a dot-tel directory, they will get lean, relevant information.
As a dot-tel developer you are taking on the challenge of developing a domain that serves a specific purpose. Using a dot-tel address, relevant information can be organized consistently and delivered in a way that is globally accessible and truly platform independent. If you can’t see the usefulness in this, then please, DON’T BUY A DOT-TEL DOMAIN.
“I’m a fan of .tel, just skeptical of its chances of success”
Saturday, May 2nd, 2009Republished with permission from the Telsters.com forums:
The .tel tld is a brilliant idea. I love the idea and I really hope it succeeds. But it faces daunting challenges - indeed, downright obstacles - to widespread adoption by the public at large. Here are some of them. I list these not to be negative about dot-tel, but to see how these challenges are being met. In order to be positive, I’m also offering some potential strategic answers, underneath.
First the challenges:
1. It’s too hard to communicate to Jane Public, her children, and her children’s’ grandparents what the difference is between what .tel is trying to do and what Plaxo, Facebook, and LinkedIn do. This is related to “It’s too techy” - Jane public and her family couldn’t care less whether information is stored directly in the dns or on a website. In fact, they will never bother making the effort to understand the difference. They don’t want to know from dns. For them, Facebook is best because you can put nice photos on it, which you can’t do with .tel — they’ll never understand why, what the difference is, etc. As far as they’re concerned, if they want to control their contact information centrally, there’s already Plaxo or LinkedIn or, indeed, Facebook, which are all free and all look much nicer and are all much more intuitive to use.
2. It’s too techy. Jane Public doesn’t know from domain names, and doesn’t want to. She MIGHT just know what a domain name is, but she’s never registered one in her life and it has never occurred to her that she may ever need or want to.
3. It’s not free. Ten or fifteen dollars might seem like such a low price that it requires little or no thought. But it’s not about how much — it’s about having to pay anything at all; having to go through the hassle of entering credit card details etc., and then having an amount be charged on a periodic basis, etc. People have been educated to believe that while you of course have to pay for anything physical that you order and that has to be delivered in a package, purely electronic offerings online should be, and are, free.
4 Apart from the techiness of it, it’s also just too complex at the moment. People are used to a simple, intuitive, SINGLE sign-up. With .tel you have to go through not one, not even two, but THREE separate sign-ups. First, you have to register a domain, which is bad enough (see number 2 above). Probably you don’t already have an account at a registrar (in fact probably you don’t even know what a registrar IS). So you have to sign up at a registrar. Then you have to choose a username and password for telhosting (if that registrar’s implementation of telhosting lets you choose). This will already lose a whole bunch of Jane Publics. THEN, once you’re in telhosting, you STILL have to activate TelFriends, using yet a third username-password set. This is a recipe for eternal obscurity. And lastly, to make things REALLY bad, the friending procedure is totally unconventional and not what people expect or want. If I send a TelFriends request to someone and they accept, then I can see their private info but they still can’t see mine (or is it the other way round? I can’t keep it all straight…) until THEY send ME a separate request which then I have to accept. This is totally against how everyone has come to expect a friending process to work. On all the social networking sites, if you send me a request and I accept or I send you a request and you accept, the result is the same: we are linked as friends in both directions. This is intuitive and how it should be. I have heard that TelFriends’ unusual approach is to give people more control over privacy, but people just aren’t going to want this, and it’s going to confuse them, put them off, and result is non-take-up of TelFriends. It’s a degree of data privacy that nobody wants. It’s just intuitive that if I want you to give me access to your private info then I will be willing to give you access to mine as a matter of course, and that is what people expect. So, in sum, three different sign-up procedures and then a baffling, confusing friending process — this is just not going to ever gain mass traction.
These are significant obstacles to .tel ever becoming anything as well-known and widely-used as the old Yellow Pages. How can they be overcome?
1. Set up a specialised registrar for ONLY .tel domains. This registrar’s interface will completely and natively integrate telhosting, so that there is only ever one sign-up procedure and only ONE username-password set for managing all aspects of the .tel domain. The registrar has to be a different legal entity from Telnic, of course, but that’s no great problem.
2. Make .tel domains free for the first few years, while making it clear to new users that, two or three years down the road, there will be a very small fee for the domain. (Caveat — see 5 below — people would willingly pay for a great e-mail offering.)
3. Drop TelFriends. WE (those using this forum) understand why TelFriends ISN’T just a totally lame, totally restricted and boring social-networking effort that is light-years behind Facebook and the others, but this is impossible to communicate to the vast public. The efforts so far, with all the mention of dns and what have you, are ineffectual because NOBODY CARES about data being stored in something mysterious called a DNS. This kind of talk is for geeks ONLY. If that’s Telnic’s only market ambition — getting the geeks and domainers interested — then I’m reading them wrong.
4. Partner with Facebook, LinkedIn, and Plaxo, and others. The MySpace deal was good, a step in the right direction, shows correct thinking. But MySpace’s audience and user base is just not the market for .tel; the demographic for .tel is university graduate and older-than-25. What should the partnerships consist of? Integrate into those social networking sites a direct, single-sign-on access to one’s own .tel information, which is then distributed, through the same integration, out to all of one’s social networking accounts. Let’s say I keep a Facebook account, a LinkedIn account, and a Plaxo account. On each of those, I enter my .tel domain, username, and password to link, say, my Facebook account with my .tel domain. I do this also at LinkedIn, Plaxo, and wherever else, but only have do to this ONCE at each of them. (This could even be taken one step further and, with the right partnership in place, you could actually create an account on the dedicated registrar within your, say, Facebook account, and maybe even register a domain, all within your Facebook account, via webservices to the registrar.) From then on, each of my social networking profiles will always get (via webservices) and show to my “friends” my current contact information. And I can control who has access to what level. For example, I can set the info that is public in my .tel to be shown on my public internet profiles for each social networking site, and then, for the private .tel info, I can choose, for each, say, Facebook Friend, whether they can see my private .tel info or not. This of course requires the necessary integration with Facebook etc, but technically it’s trivial; the challenge is at the business relationship level. The same type of partnership could be set up with Amazon, e-Bay, i-Tunes (well, okay, probably not Apple), Google Accounts, etc.
5. At the new specialised registrar set up in point 1 above, make it VERY EASY for users to have e-mail at whatever@their.tel — in fact, include it in the package by default (to opt out of if you want to save, like 10 or 20 dollars per year), providing both an attractive web email interface AND IMAP support so that people can use it nicely on their iPhones etc. People will like this, they’ll see value in it. You might not even have to do the first couple of years for free — people will be happy to pay ten or twenty dollars per year for email@their.tel (they pay some crazy amount each year for a MobileMe account, so we know this.)
6. Once the above elements are in place, do tons and tons and tons of viral marketing (only because all other types are too expensive).
I will close by saying I wish the Telnic guys every success. But, and again without wishing to be negative, I do fear that, the way things are set up at the moment, this just isn’t going to take off. The current set-up is for the few domainers, geeks, and assorted eccentrics who have the level of interest and technical comfort to start doing something with .tel — it’s going to exclude the masses unless major changes are made.
Paul Miller - Telsters.com Member
See more discussion about this post in the Telsters forums here: http://www.telsters.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=256
Tags: .tel, domain, dot-tel, ideas, innovate, simplicity, social media
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