Multiple names can boost e-commerce traffic
and sales
From January 2009
By D. Gail Fleenor
Sponsored by
Building a successful online business
entails many factors, not the least of which is
ensuring that current and potential customers
can find you.
Retailers that possess only one domain name – a
website bearing the company name – may be
missing out on potential sales from online
customers who misspell the company name or use a
search engine to seek a retailer by category or
geography. Conversely, purchasing domains with
names that attract the kinds of customers a
company covets significantly boosts
opportunities for website visits – and sales.
With a background in technology, Keith Riewe is
not your typical small business owner. After
purchasing 34-year-old Bice’s Florist and
closing all but one of its stores, Riewe managed
to increase sales 38 percent or more than $1.5
million.
Realizing that customers “don’t walk into flower
shops anymore,” Riewe focused on developing a
strong web presence with multiple domain names.
With reduced labor and operation costs and
reduced in-store product expenses, Riewe
achieved the sweet smell of success.
Riewe spent 12 years as a computer consultant to
businesses such as Frito-Lay, but always wanted
to own his own business. Bice’s, he says, “was a
top 100 [seller] with FTD and was well-known in
the Fort Worth, Texas, area.” The business was
far behind technologically, however, with only
three PCs and a website that was informational
only.
The previous owners had secured the domain name
“Bicesflorist” but not “Bices.com,” Riewe says.
“When people in the Dallas/Fort Worth area think
of our shop, they think of it just as Bice’s, so
I had to get that domain name.”
Problem was, it was owned by a German man who
didn’t want to discuss a sale, so Riewe
contacted Sedo. The company undertook
negotiations between Riewe and the seller: “It
was relatively simple,” Riewe says. “It took six
weeks to acquire the domain.”
Sedo is a German company that bills itself as a
global marketplace for buying and selling domain
names and websites. “Domains are your piece of
online real estate,” says COO Jeremiah Johnston,
and with 800,000 users in 120 countries, “we are
the eBay for domain names.”
Speculators have already purchased most domains
with any potential for business, he says, so
Sedo helps connect buyers and sellers through
auctions of domain names – and, in some cases, a
knock on the door of a domain holder to see if a
sale is a possibility.
Johnston works out of Sedo’s Cambridge, Mass.,
headquarters, “which covers half the world.” The
company has another headquarters in Cologne,
Germany, covering “the rest of the world,” and
offers customer support in 20 languages.
To increase his e-commerce traffic, Riewe had to
think like an online flower shopper. If a
customer is looking for a wreath from a florist
near Fort Worth, odds are the customer is
plugging “flower” or “florist” and “Fort Worth”
into a search engine. This might bring up
fortworthflowers.com, a domain owned by Riewe.
When you click the link, it seamlessly redirects
you to bices.com, the store’s main website.
Riewe estimates that he now owns more than 20
domain names.
“The other day a lady in Switzerland called us,”
he says. “She has someone living in the
Dallas/Fort Worth area and located us on the
Internet. “We are capturing orders from Ireland,
China and Australia. It’s crazy,” though most of
the florist’s orders still come from Dallas/Fort
Worth.
Benefits of a trademark
The local competition isn’t what keeps Riewe up
at night: “I’m more concerned about FTD,
1-800-FLOWERS and Teleflora, the ones with the
advertising dollars,” he says. Having multiple
domain names, he says, “levels the playing
field” for smaller operators like Bice’s.
When building an e-commerce profile and
presence, businesses should cover their bases by
seeking domains for the company name “and the
subject matter of your business,” Johnston says.
As a trademark attorney, he observes that one of
the limitations of a trademark is the fact that
generic terms cannot be trademarked. “If you’re
a florist, you can’t just name your business
‘florist’,” he says. “However, you can get
domains that match descriptive terms of your
business.
“It’s almost as if you’re getting the benefit of
having a trademark without worrying about the
legal issues, so it’s very cost-effective,”
Johnston says.
The catalyst for Sedo’s business is generic
description domains, he says. “All the good
[domain names] have natural traffic: People type
in the generic domain expecting to find goods
related to that subject,” Johnston says. “If you
have that domain, you receive the benefit of
this, similar to using a search engine like
Yahoo! or Google.
“Generic domains send traffic to websites every
day without extra costs, which is a significant
savings, especially for smaller businesses.”
Defensive strategy
Johnston recommends obtaining variations on a
company’s name because web shoppers often
mistype. If a business name ends in “s,” for
instance, it makes good sense to also purchase
the domain name without the “s.”
Some businesses want to gather domain names for
defensive purposes, in case someone tries to
exploit the business. Securing hundreds of
domain names is becoming a common strategy for
large companies, Johnston says. “Calvin Klein
has underwear.com, bras.com; Barnes and Noble
has books.com. A one-word descriptive can be
very valuable as a domain.”
Online browsers are akin to walk-in traffic at a
bricks-and-mortar store, Johnston says. “We want
to make it easier for businesses large and small
to search for domains [and] get the domains they
want ... as affordably as possible.”
Riewe, he says, “sees the long-term value [that]
domains can have for his business. He is using
his imagination to collect a portfolio of
descriptive domains, which is like bringing
people to your business’ doorstep.