Affiliates
Domain Names
Internet Marketing
ISPs
Podcasts
TCP/IP
Web
XML
Available?
In Use?
How Long?
Make Offer
Backorder
Join Auction
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1. Be prepared to register the domain
- Don't do a whois query unless you're going to register the domain immediately.
Otherwise you're likely to find that someone else with access to those queries got the domain first.
At that point, you will have to either buy the domain, backorder it or pick a different one.
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2. Determine how the domain being used
- Enter the domain name in the address bar of your browser.
If it looks like the site is being using primarily for pay-per-click advertising,
then it is more likely that the domain will be released at some future date than
if the domain name is being actively used by a business, organization or other entity.
In fact, if the domain has already expired those ads may have been put there by the registrar.
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3. How long before the domain might be released?
- If you made the mistake of searching for available domain names on a web site
and the domain got snatched up by someone else before you registered it,
then it will probably be over two years before it expires and gets released.
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4. Consider making an offer on the domain
- If you are willing to spend at least $200, try to
make an offer on a domain name.
You can make an offer on any domain, not just ones that are listed.
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5. Backorder the domain
, preferably before telling anyone else what the name is.
- There are some sites where you can
backorder a domain name
on a first come, first served basis, rather than a highest-bid auction format.
If you backorder there as soon as possible, the domain can no longer be backordered by
anyone else through that site or any other site that uses the same interface and back end.
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6. Join the auction for expired domain names.
- If the domain goes past its expiration date without renewal,
go to the auction site(s) and join the auction for the expired domain.
Most domains will initially go up for auction on just one site,
depending on which one the registrar has an exclusive partnership with.
Many of the better domains, especially two-word ".com" domains, get snatched back up at this point,
before they are ever "deleted" where they can be caught by a backorder request.
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Last updated Saturday April 21, 2007
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