Monetization: How to pick a profitable blog subject Should your Home page be a Site Map?
Feb 25

Adobe is officially launching its Flash-based hybrid desktop and web development platform, known as Air, this week. The platform enables application developers to build programs that run in sync as web applications (accessible via any connected device) and as desktop applications (accessible on your machine when you don’t have Internet access). These programs can run as Internet-connected widgets, meaning they don’t require a traditional browser. Microsoft offers a competitive platform called Silverlight. Google also has something similar in the works called Gears. Together, these new models for interacting with the Internet have the potential to totally change the way we access and utilize the web. So how do they affect the domain world?

These platforms could eliminate the exclusivity of access to web information that unique domains offer. In fact domains could become a much smaller piece of the pie because we won’t travel to individual sites as frequently as we do now. Just as Google is the default starting point for most web activity, various application-driven sites will suck up huge amounts of traffic covering very large amounts of information categories, all on a single domain. For a simplistic (on the surface anyway) example, take a look at Amazon. The company took ten years to reach profitability but when it did last year the results were spectacular. The reason it took so long is that Amazon was building an enormous application around shopping, the default shopping application. They literally carry or offer everything. Think about it. If you want to buy a sophisticated piece of electronic test equipment, say a Fluke 700, you can get it via Amazon. While most of us think of Amazon as a glorified bookstore, it is, in reality, the largest consumables site on the web, a sort of AOL for shopping. As this site grows all those millions of consumable-focused domains will become marginalized; the mom and pop stores of the Internet. Amazon is a platform, an application for shopping and a search engine.

Now imagine the ability to easily build similar search-focused information delivery platforms. Any kid with programming skills can do so with these new tools like Air. If they build them and put them on a unique domain (like the hundreds of goofy Web 2.0 sites out there) they will sink into the gigantic maws of the web and disappear. If, instead, they choose to join an online ecosystem like those being offered by Google, Amazon and others, they will be integrated into those systems’ search, marketing, fulfillment, data and monetization tools, giving them a chance to survive and thrive. But not on a unique domain.

One of the outcomes we’re already seeing is the commoditization of brands on the web. If I want a Honda Accord I really don’t care where I get it. As long as it’s the color and model I want (there are only 4 or 5 choices) and the price is the lowest, I’ll buy it via an Amazon or eBay. It’s a known commodity. Once I’m past an initial brand decision and on the web my intent is a deal. I’m not being convinced anymore to change brands. I don’t need cars.com, coolrides.com, convertibles.com- all I need is a search and that search is going to point me to a shopping portal 90% of the time.

This POV isn’t doom for domainers; it’s a scenario, not a reality. But it is a scenario that is unfolding as web access becomes ubiquitous and platforms like Air and Silverlight keep us synced with the web all of the time. Food for thought.

This is all, of course, speculation. But think about this: what happens when you can store terabytes of information on your iPhone? Maybe you keep a copy of the million most popular web sites on there, a copy that automatically updates itself each time your device connects? You might not need any other sites…

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