Basic uses and purposes of Domain Names In order for the exchange of information to be organized and searchable on the World Wide Web domain names are used.
Domain names are substitutes for
IP addresses, which are presented numerically, in order to further simplify the process of searching for information on the Internet. Domain name servers maintain the list that matches domain names to IP addresses. There are two types of domain names TLDs or Top Level Domains which include: .com, .edu, .gov, .net, .org, etc., and SLDs or secondary level domains, which precedes TLDs in the web address, and usually refers to the organization that has been registered to TLD by
ICANN.
Domain Names become Lucrative Domain names started to become a lucrative good when businesses began advertising themselves on websites other than the ones that they operated. These businesses paid fees to place their ads on other websites, and the ads were initially displayed on banners with links to the advertisers webpage embedded within them. The number of ‘click throughs’ for an ad on a particular webpage determined the rates a website could charge an advertiser. Monetizing web-spaces and links such as this soon gave way to auctioning off domain names.
Auctioning Domain Names The final step that led to auctioning off domain names was Google's Pay per click (PPC) auction model which allowed bidders to buy search terms. This allowed webpage owners to sponsor a keyword so that their ad could appear each time a user searched the term on
Google, and thus increased the likelihood of the ‘clickthroughs’ their sponsor ad obtained. Gradually, as advertisement placement and sponsoring or trademarking search terms on the
World Wide Web became a viable source of profit, so did domain names that attracted attention from Internet users and advertisers. Additionally, new business models for monetizing
domain names are emerging. In addition to the Pay per click (PPC) model, the Cost per action (CPA) or pay-per-action model is being used as a new strategy for online advertising. ==Recent Developments==