Posts Tagged ‘.tel’

The .tel Sister Site

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

.tel domains are meant to be a single point of contact. .tel domains are the most useful and easy way to present a direct source of contact information, but what happens if you need more than static content to be presented to your visitors?

.tel domains are designed to display information. There is no ability for a .tel domain to process information or to perform server-side functions based on visitor activity. When a visitor comes to a .tel domain, they are presented with clickable options that direct them to a different location. These choices can not be changed within the .tel domain based on the individual actions of the user.

If you want to change the information being presented to your visitors, you need to change the content of the .tel domain, either through software or through the Telhosting Control Panel. In order for your visitors to interact with you, beyond clicking links, you will need a server to handle these types of requests. To handle these processes the .tel “Sister Site” is your best choice for expanding your .tel offerings.

A .tel Sister Site is a website that is hosted on a traditional webserver and is directly related to a .tel directory in either functionality and/or theme. A Sister Site can be any TLD but is best suited as something similar in branding to the .tel to which it is related.

Although no definitive practices have been established, here are some suggestions on how to structure a .tel Sister Site…

.tel Domain and .tel Sister Site Naming:

Main .tel:
myawesome.tel

Sister Site:
myawesometel.com

This way you maintain branding for your .tel and also emphasize the .tel through both domains. Cross-linking the two will help with SEO and will make your options for marketing and linking more flexible.

.tel Sister Site Components:

Your .tel Sister Site should, at the very least, have the following:

Logo/Branding - Standard issue for any website but also useful for branding your .tel

Links to your .tel - This is a given. Your .tel should also link back to your Sister Site where appropriate.

Information about .tel - While the general public is still becoming aware of .tel, this is an opportunity to explain it to them. You could potentially generate .tel sales from this information as additional revenue.

5 Ways to make your .tel Sister Site Succeed:

1. .tel Specific Advertising
Advertise your .tel as well as linking to it. Creating banners and other ads for promoting your .tel directly are a sure way to increase exposure of your .tel and increase awareness of .tel overall. An example of .tel specific advertising tools can be found at: http://www.glittel.com/admaker/.

2. .tel Interactivity
Offer ways to interact with your .tel domain, through your Sister Site, that can not be achieved through a .tel or other websites. If you can provide your visitors with value that can only be found through your .tel, you will have a definite winner.

3. Trade Links
Trade links with other sites for your .tel Sister Site and also use your .tel and Sister Site for A-B-C linking and other cross-linking techniques. .tel domains combined with Sister Sites can create tremendous linking strength.

4. Default to .tel
Whenever possible, if you are trying to improve the rank of your .tel, make your default choice the .tel link. If you are posting links, embedding links, trading links, etc., if you are able to link to your .tel, do it. Your .tel will have a higher rate of people taking action on specific links and you can easily make your Sister Site one of those links.

5. Reflect Your .tel
.tel is meant to be a single point of contact. Other TLDs are meant to serve web pages, graphics, video, animations, etc. Your .tel is a precisely structured list of contact information and your Sister Site should reflect that precision and structure. A lean .tel will lose it’s effectiveness beside a messy Sister Site.

Without a Sister Site, you may be limiting your potential for what your .tel can do for your visitors. .tel is great as a central communications hub. By adding a complimentary Sister Site to your .tel you will truly have the best of both Worlds and significantly increase your chances of .tel success.

If you would like to share your thoughts on .tel Sister Sites, or .tel domains in general, feel free to drop by the Telsters forums at http://www.telsters.com/forum

The Power of .tel Profiles

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

.tel Profiles are probably one of the most understated and unexplored aspects of .tel domains. Profiles give you the ability to set up contact records and information based on who you would like them to be seen by.

5 Things That Make .tel Profiles Interesting:

1. Profiles Allow Customization
You can create different sets of records and have those records only display for certain people. Not only does a .tel allow you to display any contact information, but it also allows you to decide who sees that information and when.

2. Profiles Control Privacy
You can set up different profiles to display different information to different people. This makes it possible for you to limit and restrict who sees what type of information. Profiles enable personas and control access. You could potentially display completely different information to your friends from that of your business associates or others.

3. Profiles Can Create Interactivity
With Profiles you can present different contact information to different visitors. With some scripting and a Sister Site, combining .tel profiles with user management can create some very compelling possibilities for user interaction.

4. Profiles Can Be Changed Instantly
You can instantly change who sees what information in your .tel by changing profiles. It is possible to change your contact information or even change who sees your information. This can all be done from your own .tel management and does not require notifying or updating all of the people you know.

5. Profiles Can Save Time
You can set up different profiles for different situations (e.g. Work, Vacation, Cottage, Home, etc.) and then change ALL of your contact information in one motion. Instead of changing your contact information to reflect your current situation, you can set up profiles and switch to an active profile when needed.

Now that you know why .tel Profiles are so great, you should go set up more than just your default. You’ll need to set up your TelFriends account, but once you’re ready, you’ll wonder how you did without them. If you would like to discuss .tel Profiles or anything else that is related to .tel, visit the Telsters.com Forums at www.telsters.com/forum

6 Ways To Increase The Success Of Your .tel Directory

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

.tel domains are about communications. They are about putting people in contact with information that is valuable to them. People get excited when they find useful information. With the right strategy, you can not only make your .tel directory exciting, but you can potentially turn it into a leading resource for Internet users Worldwide.

Here are some suggestions for making your .tel domain stand out from the crowd and separate it from the others.

Present Compelling Content
For traditional websites this is a no-brainer and is pretty straightforward. With a website you can host articles, pictures, movies, animations and other forms of media that allow you to grab a viewers attention. With .tel you are only able to provide links and some text. Some might consider this a restriction, others would call it an exercise in brevity. Make sure your .tel is loaded with concise information in the text areas and valuable links in other areas. You need to organize and structure your content so it is easy to navigate and contains the least amount of clicks for the user to find what they need. If your .tel contains many valuable links for visitors, they will likely use it as a regular resource.

Build a .com
A .tel on it’s own is not very diverse, but through programming and scripting a .tel domain can become a very robust and flexible source of information. In order to maximize the potential of a .tel domain it is necessary to use server side tools, but since these tools can not be hosted on a .tel domain, it is necessary to host them on another domain, such as a .com. Without an accompanying .com (or other web site) to go with your .tel directory, you will have very limited options in how you can communicate with your visitors. If you build a site that is directly related to your .tel domain, a “sister site” on a web server, you will significantly increase your options for building on your .tel efforts.

Build an app
Accessing .tel domains via the web is only the beginning of .tel visitor interaction. .tel domains store data in an extremely efficient and fast manner, in the DNS. There are open-source applications that can be expanded and customized to suit the needs of your visitors. If the basic TelProxy doesn’t suit your needs you will either need to plug your .tel domain into a related website or build an application for your visitors to get the best viewing experience possible. If the information you present is valuable and the application you develop makes interacting with that data better, then people will use it.

Trade some links
.tel domains are primarily set up for displaying links to profiles, web pages and even other .tel domains. Why not trade links with other .tel domain owners or website owners. Link trading has the same benefits whether through .tel or other websites.

Write a Press Release
Press releases are a great method for reaching out to the public. A well written press release can generate all sorts of visitor activity and discussion about your .tel. If the news you release is relevant, you may find your .tel mentioned in places you never even thought of.

Socialize
Get out and share the news. Talk to people. Post on forums. Tell your friends and family. Spread the word. The most successful viral marketing campaigns can begin with one person who tells 2 friends, and so on and so on. If your .tel has something unique or unusual, you might have the next viral phenomenon.

There are lots of ways to promote your .tel domains and increase your chances for success. Merely setting up a .tel directory and expecting people to automatically find it is completely unrealistic. A successful .tel domain has visitors who act on the information provided. If you are able to incorporate the ideas listed above into your marketing strategy, you will significantly increase your chances of success with your .tel domains.

And… If you have any news or ideas you would like to share, stop by Telsters.com and chat in the forums ;)

Formula for a successful .tel directory

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

There are lots of .tel domains regisitered, over 200,000 of them. Many of these were bought for speculation and investment. Another group were bought for personal use. Of those that were bought for business development purposes there is a large number that appear to be slated for construction as a commercial .tel directory.

Commercial .tel directories can come in essentially two different types pay-per-listing directories and advertisier sponsored directories. In the first example a .tel domain is developed into being a directory where people pay to be included in the listings. In the second example, a directory is filled with listings and then advertising is placed along side of the listings in the directory. It is also possible to combine these two into a hybrid directory.

The level of success that a .tel directory can achieve is still up to many factors. Regardless of the differences in .tel and how it works in contrast to other domains, there are still key fundamental elements that are required for any directory, .tel or otherwise, to succeed.

The formula for .tel directory success is very simple:

listings x visitors = $$$

If you have lots of visitors, but no listings, there is nothing for the visitors to see, or return to, so your revenue will be zero.
If you have lots of listings, but no visitors, then there are no people to act on those listings and/or ads.

It is very simple. No where in this equation is the name of the .tel directory or the type of niche or any other specific information relating to the directory. With this simple equation your revenue grows with the growth of your visitors and listings.

Before you set out to build the next great .tel directory, ask yourself the following questions:

Who will want to see this information?
Where will these people find out about my directory?
How many people do I need to get visiting my directory every day to justify advertising?

These are the more complex questions that require industry and niche specific knowledge. If you can not answer these questions, you have research ahead of you. After you have figured out the answers to these questions you will be better prepared to set up your .tel directory.

When you are setting up a directory, whether it is .tel or otherwise, you will need traffic to view your listings. If your listings are useful, those people will bookmark your directory and return to use it again. Without traffic, building a directory is irrelevant. If a tree falls in an empty woods, it doesn’t matter what kind of tree it is, there’s still no one to hear it.

.tel sucks? If there are good reasons why, I have yet to hear them.

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

As time passes and the positive efforts concerning the .tel domain continue to progress, there remains a small group of people out there who feel compelled to repeat the same arguments concerning their negative views on .tel domains.

It would be nice if the anti .tel camp could come up with some new material, but it looks like they are running out of steam.

Although most of these arguments have been addressed in various locations online (forums, blogs, etc), here is a compilation of responses to the most commonly cited anti .tel rhetoric.

Q:
“.tel should have never been released”, “ICANN should be ashamed”

A:
Well they did. It’s here and it’s not going to go away. So either live with it or ignore it. I somehow doubt ICANN, Telnic, owners, prospects and others are worried about this minority view. All evidence points to .tel growing in popularity at this point.

Q:
“.tel is a hack”, “It’s in beta”, “It doesn’t work”, etc.

A:
Welcome to the Internet. .tel works and it works well for the task it needs to do. The same could have been (and has been) said for Windows, MANY software applications, web sites and even the Internet itself. If you don’t like what it does, no one is forcing you to care about it and like ANY technology, it’s only going to improve. This argument is, at best, a semi-sensationalist statement, but really holds no value and has been overstated.

Q:
“.tel would have been good in the 90s”

A:
I can not believe that this has actually been posted as part of the .tel debate, let alone that it is a recurring statement. Was anyone who says this ACTUALLY using computers in the 90s? In the 90s no one had their own web page, that was for geeks and corporations. Geocities pages, etc., were all run by geeks and porn pushers and NO ONE did online dating or had “profiles”. How many people had cell phones in the 90s or even computers? It is only in today’s World of personal profiles, ubiquitous richmedia, sophisticated handhelds and multimedia convergence that a dedicated contact hub has become useful. The anti .tel arguments put forth may have been valid in the 90s, but this is the 21st century where the Internet is comprised of more elements than just the Web and the Web is now about FAR more than web pages.

Q:
“.tel is targeted towards MySpace and FB users who will never buy it”

A:
In reality, .tel is intended for anyone who has more than one contact point, so pretty much everyone on Earth who is connected somehow. It just so happens that right now FB and MySpace are the big players. Lots of those people have social site profiles, but lots of the intended target market do not. Yes, .tel is marketing to MySpace and FB users, but who isn’t or wouldn’t if they could? People who use free sites do pay money and buy things, this is pretty much a fundamental element of online marketing, if they didn’t then why do FB and MySpace exist? It’s amazing how people make broad claims about things that are based solely on opinion without facts or even evidence.

Q:
“.tel domains are too restricted”, “When Telnic changes their policy, then maybe…”

A:
Too restricted to do what exactly? For the task is it assigned to do it is extremely robust and elegant. No, you can not point a .tel to a regular webserver but this is for many reasons that have been presented and are pretty easy to understand. So either you accept this, or you do not. If you do not like this aspect, then use something else. Thousands of people have accepted this fact and spent their money without complaint which would indicate that at least a few of them may see some value. Questioning whether this policy will change is completely pointless. Assume it will never happen and figure it out from there.

Q:
“You can do this on any TLD without restrictions”

A:
No you can not. NO other TLD uses the DNS for storage like .tel and no other will in this manner. Regardless of whether this is good or bad, it is an indisputable fact. This has many benefits that have been presented and no one has come up with a compelling reason why this is a “BAD” thing. .tel is fast and it’s lean, if you want extra frills, yes, please, go use something else.
The entire cost of ownership includes time, not just server and reg fees. Under MANY circumstances the time factor favors .tel when comparing apples to apples. And… Even if you could replicate the DNS storage system, why would you waste your time reinventing a wheel you can buy for $10.

Q:
“You can do the same for free on MySpace, FB, Google profiles, etc.”

A:
No you can not. ALL of those examples require you to set up an account with that organization and they own your URL. With .tel you own your .tel URL and it is not branded by being a sub-domain or directory of a domain. Your .tel is a simple, one-dot, no-slash URL. It is shocking how many people who are in the “domain business” and don’t grasp the necessity of URL ownership or would actually suggest that an account elsewhere is a comparable solution to owning your URL.

Q:
“You can’t develop them”

A:
Yes you can. Development FOR .tel is growing exponentially and this would be covered by the “.tel development” blanket. Populating a .tel directory is not much different from setting up a static web page so does this mean a large number of web page creators are also not web developers? How do databases fit into this terminology or Flash? Where exactly is the line that divides “developers” from the rest of the population? If I develop for .tel domains that I own, then I am developing my .tel domains. The anti .tel camp must be desparate for arguments if semantics and the meaning of the word “development” are a main point of contention.

Q:
“How do you plan to develop them?”

A:
The same way anyone else develops Internet applications. Using server-side programming, client-side apps and combining the two. Whatever you can’t do directly on a .tel, you can do on a related .tld or with other software. .tel domains are complimentary to other TLDs AND other communications technologies. It’s funny that so many .tel haters are also self-proclaimed “web developers” but ignore or can’t see this obvious basic concept.

Q:
“You can’t use PHP, AJAX, etc.”
Not hosted on the .tel itself, no you can’t and this is a well known fact covered everywhere in the most basic of materials about .tel.
You most certainly can use these technologies elsewhere to interact with .tel domains however. It is actually possible to update a .tel domain and NEVER use the Web. That is correct NO WEB. People use software and interact with the Internet without access to the WEB. This argument is a strong indicator of a narrow view of the Internet in general. I will repeat: .tel is for MORE than WEB pages and it is not dependent on WEB pages to work. The “WEB” is not the same as the “Internet”.

Q:
“You can’t monetize them”

A:
The blanket claim that .tel domains can not be monetized is founded by arrogance and/or a blatant disregard of the obvious. They are as viable as any other technology property out there. It goes without saying that to monetize anything online you need traffic and content. If someone is trying to build a .tel based business without complimentary technology and/or marketing ability, then yes they are foolish, but that has nothing to do with .tel and is the same for ANY product or service. To broadly and definitively state that ANYTHING (.tel or otherwise) can NOT be monetized is absurd.

Opinions presented by .tel haters are comprised of the same, repetitive opinions that have been listed above. If anyone has some new data or compelling info, feel free to let me know and I’d be happy to hear them, otherwise I think that about covers it.

There may be no new arguments on the side against .tel, but the arguments in favor of it’s success continue to grow.

See ya in the SERPs… Or more like, you’ll see me! ;)
FS

.Tel Cures Spam?

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

This is a bold claim. Can it be true? Let’s take a look at the possibilities and see…

You start with an e-mail address.

The more it gets used, the higher the likelihood that it gets picked up or passed to a spammer. Once this address hits the point of being spammed too much, you decide to change your address. Now the joy begins.

You need to e-mail all of your friends “My e-mail address has changed”.
You need to update all of your accounts, profiles, forwards, application settings, etc.
You need to deal with the leftover people who don’t get your new address and lose potential contacts.

Enter dot-tel…

Instead of spreading your actual e-mail address, you spread your .tel as your contact point. People add it to their address books and e-mail programs and those programs automatically update your address if it changes.

Should your e-mail address get picked up and put on a list, no worries. Everyone who you want to have your proper information will have your dot-tel address. When you change your e-mail address, all of those people will have the new address instantly. It is not as likely that your address would be picked up if you make it private to your friends, coworkers, family, etc. With TelFriends, that address is protected from undesirables.

Using disposable e-mail addresses as a method for spam reduction is not new but with .tel the process becomes simplified. A .tel address gives you the opportunity to easily manage disposable e-mail addresses and this reason alone makes having a .tel address worthwhile. If your address is a moving target, instead of a stationary one, spammers will find it harder to hit you.

Is .tel the cure for spam? As people make the transition to .tel addresses from other contact methods, we will certainly find out.

Making The .Tel Domain Cool

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

In order for the .tel domain to succeed it has to overcome some obstacles. .tel is the first domain to try and change the perception of what domains mean. A .tel domain isn’t about a web page, it’s about your identity. With a .tel domain you can show people who you are with one address. One address that can instantly link to anything that you have created, anything with which you are associated and any way in which you would like to communicate. That is pretty cool.

The problem is that the World of domains is inherently techy, so when you are trying to explain them to someone, if that person does not have an interest in technology, they will likely lose interest, once they detect the technical nature of the topic.

Some people still have a technology block in their brain. Even though people make use of technology daily, they still resist it in many forms.

.tel domain ownership needs to become non-techy for the general public to care. By nature, .tel is a fundamentally different domain. You may be able to do the same things .tel can do on another domain, but you can NOT do what other domains do on a .tel.

What does that mean?

It means .tel domains are not meant for technical people. .tel domains are meant to bring ALL forms of communication together. This includes the World Wide Web but it is not exclusive to web pages.

Right now, the only reason you would want a domain is to build a website. If you don’t need a website, you don’t need a domain. With .tel, a person with no website can use a .tel domain.

A person with personal profiles, photo albums, playlists and forum memberships could certainly benefit from having a .tel domain. A person with no web page, but several phone numbers and e-mail addresses could certainly benefit from a .tel domain.

The average consumer doesn’t want to deal with DNS, web sites, HTML, etc., etc. And if they want the benefits of the web for personal use, they’ll use FB or MS or blog or IM or VoIP or send e-mail, or, or, or. Where this can get complicated is in keeping track of all of these web pages, profiles, e-mails, etc.

Profiles, IM, file sharing and other services are what people use on a personal level. They are easy, cool and fun. Domains aren’t fun. They are not really much of a service, they are a commodity, a product, a responsibility. In comparison to a personal profile, the work to reward ratio is not worth the bother for the average person.

Blogging brought personal websites to a new level of perception. At first, people questioned the value of having a blog. Now people question why you would not have a blog. Microblogging has spawned a whole new subset of communications. Add in social bookmarking, photo sharing, personal profiles and the list gets long very quickly. With a .tel domain all of these things can be brought together into one single location that represents who you are.

The real trick is to make owning a domain cool, fun and exciting but also easy to manage, build and share. When owning your own domain and website becomes as easy as setting up a blog or profile, then the general public will take notice. A .tel domain has the potential to do this and make owning a domain kewl.

“I’m a fan of .tel, just skeptical of its chances of success”

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

Republished 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

Dot-Tel News Articles for Telsters

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Some very interesting dot-tel news:

Are .tel addresses the new vanity phone numbers?

Great Business Opportunity with the .Tel domain name

BC Realtor is First Small Business to Feature Dot-TEL in Print Ad

Dot tel won’t have major spam impact

Monetize Hires Dot-Tel Lead

Enjoy :D

Dot-Tel Business Model #1 - The Directory

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

One model for Dot-Tel Domain Monetization…

Sometimes technology replaces solutions, other times it serves as an augmentation or compliment to an existing solution. Sometimes technology creates its own categories and systems altogether. For those who are adaptive and creative, dot-tel is a diamond in the rough. It may not be obvious at first, but with the right cutting and polishing a dot-tel can prove to be a very valuable treasure.

Dot-tel domains offer a unique functionality. Dot-tel allows you to store contact information in a directory that is stored in the DNS. Dot-tel was structured around a very common application that has been around for many of the stages in the evolution of technology. The Directory Service has always been, and will continue to be a simple business model that can be applied to directory listings regardless of the delivery mechanism and dot-tel is no exception.

A directory generally consists of information listings that are related to a particular niche. A more general directory can have sub-categories to further divide the directory into additional niches. Directories can have paid or free listings. Directories can be free to browse or be subscription based. Many combinations of fee structures and directory models have been proven to work both online and off. It is only logical, or maybe even obvious, that the application of directory business models to the dot-tel frame makes sense.

Beyond the standard company listings for a dot-tel, a dot-tel directory could contain:

  • Niche specific listings that are pay-for-inclusion based
  • Freely accessible directories with limited paid placement or affiliate link placement
  • Free-to-list/Pay-to-view directories

The success or failure of a directory is dependent on several factors, but a dot-tel directory offers some unique benefits that create the potential for setting them apart from others:

Directory listings that are useful
Dot-tel offers the leanest form of directory listing available. If the information contained within the listing is useful to the niche it is targeting, this is the most efficient way to present that information.

Interested visitors to the directory
ANY service requires visitors/customers. If a dot-tel directory has traffic, it will have value to advertisers. Traffic can be pushed to dot-tel directories in all of the same ways that other directories get traffic. Because of the efficient nature of dot-tel directories, traffic coming from a dot-tel directory should be very focused.

Advertisers willing to pay for listings and/or customers that are willing to pay to see listings
If your directory has traffic, advertisers will pay to have their listings displayed in front of those visitors. If your directory is filled with information that is of exceptional value, you may be able to charge a subscription fee to view these listings. Dot-tel directories have the features necessary, already built in, to facilitate these models.

System for Managing Friends and Limiting Viewers
Dot-tel has a built-in friend managing system so that a dot-tel directory owner can control who is able to view the directory. This enables the dot-tel directory owner complete control over who sees what parts of the directory. Subscription based directory services are essentially built in to dot-tel.

There are many possibilities for combining elements of successful directory business models and then applying them to a dot-tel based system. What makes dot-tel especially compelling is that viewers of the directory are not limited to web browsers. The directory is accessible to any device potentially increasing the number of viewers dramatically.

Creative developers have managed to create significant revenue streams using directory services for almost any niche imaginable using any technology available. A dot-tel directory can be managed and accessed by any device from any location, making dot-tel the most accessible directory platform in history. For those who question the potential for generating revenue from a dot-tel domain, the first place they should look is at the directory. This is just one dot-tel model full of riches waiting to be mined, cut and polished and more will definitely follow.



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