.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



R.I.P. Dot Com. We barely Knew Ye!
Tuesday, March 24th, 2009by Scott Smith (Published with permission at telsters.com)
The late 90’s ushered in one of the most prominent “they were the best of times, they were the worst of times” eras the world has seen. The widespread acceptance of the then infant Internet as a creditable place to do business underpinned a modern day gold rush of epic proportions. Millions of new “surfers” went online and quickly became intoxicated by the ease at which they could communicate and buy and sell goods and services online. The true Internet boom had begun. Billions of dollars of profits were generated, seemingly out of thin air, as entrepreneurs exploited the power bestowed on them by fat cat venture capitalists and few well-chosen letters to the left of the dot in “dot com”. The Internet went mainstream and the dot com TLD extension was quickly established as the 800 lb. gorilla with domain names often changing hands for multi-millions of dollars.
But as is often the case, in a relative heartbeat, in March of 2000, the boom … bust. The bubble burst.
Poof.
Since then, with lessons learned, the rebuilding began. Over the last nine years generations of people have ingrained the progeny of the Internet into the fabric of their daily lives. One would be hard pressed to find someone who has never heard of, or are members one or more of MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, Linked In and hundreds of other social networks. Add to that all of the associated tubes, mash-ups, wikis, rss feeds, IMs, iTunes, text messages, tweets, blogs, pokes, flickrs, smileys, screen names, passwords, phone numbers and the like, it’s no wonder we’re submerged (or sinking) in a dysfunctional communications funk. We’re in a virtual communications Armageddon.
Surely there is a way to simplify this whole communications mess?
Enter the dot com killer. Welcome simplicity. Welcome Dot-tel.
Dot-tel (.tel) is the new kid on the block, the new ICANN approved TLD that will revolutionize the way we communicate. .tel will push the boundaries of communications and the internet to the next level, putting the power back into the hands of the individual when it comes to using and sharing contact information.
.tel domains enable you to store contact information, keywords and location
information and to publish it to the internet quickly and securely without having to build a website.
Henri Asseily CTO and Chief Strategist at Telnic, the. tel registry, is widely quoted today saying,
“This fundamental change in the use of the internet will break open the ability for anyone to now own a domain and be found from any device. This is the biggest innovation to hit the internet and communications and it seems fitting that we have achieved this on the 133rd anniversary of the first use of the telephone. From today, people will be able to dial a .tel name to connect with people. The future of communications is now wide open to innovation.”
Skeptics may chime in saying that – “What do you expect from a Telnic exec, surely they have to sing the praises of their new product. They need to push a ton of domains to recoup their multi-year, multi-million dollar investment”
That may be so. But here are only a few reasons why I think that .tel will be a smashing success:
.tel domains are unique: .tel is the only TLD extension designed from the ground up link directly to contact information stored in the DNS
.tel domains save money: .tel domains do not require websites to be built and hosted and aside from annual renewals, there are no fees for ongoing maintenance and development
.tel domains are easy to use: a .tel domain can be populated within minutes with all types of contact information, including the use of premium rate telephone numbers, payment via SMS premium rate short codes for content downloads and links to e-commerce sites ranging from third-party hosted auction pages through to fully-fledged e-commerce shops
.tel domains will be difficult to cybersquat: .tel domains can only be registered by registrants who provide at least one piece of verifiable contact information. Violators can quickly be identified and actions undertaken by the appropriate authorities
.tel domains have already been purchased by the big players: The New York City Police, American Idol, the X Factor, Britain’s Got Talent, Australian Idol, Pop Idol, Star Academy, BBC, BSkyB, Virgin Media, ITV, Fox, CBS, Discovery, HBO, MTV, Canal+, the Movie Channel, Yellow Pages and thousands of major corporations from around the world.
I could go with many more examples but let me share perhaps the single biggest reason why I think .tel will, over time, leave all other domain extensions floundering in its wake.
I have been a professional domainer for nearly 10 years. I have witnessed and/or actively participated in all of the new domain releases dating back to the 2002 .US landrush (which NeuStar thoroughly cocked up), up to and including .biz, .info, .eu, .asia, .name, .asia, .me and dozens of others.
In all of my years of domaining I have never seen a registry so proactively reach out and engage their audience like Telnic has. Having taken a page from the respective books that made the MySpace’s and the Facebook’s of the world so wildly popular, Telnic is embracing the community, joining the blogs and forums, asking people for their input and feedback and actually following up on promises to make the changes that will make .tel more user-friendly and ultimately more valuable for everyone. Senior executives actually return phone calls and emails, often within minutes of being sent.
Let me repeat – they follow up. Man is that refreshing! These guys make many of the executives at some of the other registries (NeuStar, listen to your colleagues!), look like buffoons.
I’ll finish with this anecdote. The aforementioned Henri Asseily, CTO of Telnic weighed in on a thread posted at www.telsters.com, the leading .tel forum, thusly. Henri answered the technical question posed and ended with this comment:
“Maybe once the community starts growing a bit we should have a simple poll.”
What a concept! Let’s ask the community what they want and see if we can make it work. Pure genius.
OK, so after this next proclamation, it’s highly likely that my fellow domainers will take up a collection to have the men in the white coats come and drag me off to the loony bin. But here goes…
I predict that within 4-6 years the .com TLD will be usurped from it’s lofty perch and be forever supplanted by .tel or one of its innovative contemporary TLDs.
Scott Smith is a professional domainer and President of TelCartel (www.telcartel.com), a registered reseller of domains which specializes in the distribution and promotion of .tel domains.
Telnic is the registry for .tel ( www.telnic.com).
Tags: articles, communications, domain, domainer, domaining, dot-tel.tel, extension, Facebook, ICANN, Linked In, MySpace, news, opinions, profits, services, tld, Twitter, wireless
Posted in .tel Commentary, Monetizing .tel | 11 Comments »