Houston Chronicle

Companies’ use of .com is no longer so common

- By Joyce M. Rosenberg

NEW YORK — Did the website address you just went to really end with “.vegas” instead of “.com”?

It’s not a mistake. Companies, organizati­ons and people are starting to forsake the familiar “.com” and “.org” Internet address suffixes, using instead hundreds of new ones like “.legal,” “.restaurant,” “.solutions,” “.movie” and “.nyc” that have been coming on the market since early 2014.

Some U.S. companies have started using suffixes that previously were used in other countries or territorie­s, such as Puerto Rico’s “.pr.” Others are catching up to a handful like “.jobs” and “.travel” that became available a decade ago.

Known to some as notcoms, the suffixes give companies a chance to get website addresses, known as domains, that include their names. Many have tried to get a “.com” domain, only to find someone else already had it. They’re also used as a marketing tool, helping an organizati­on or business show the public what they’re about. The suffixes are eye-catching and trendy, especially with tech-savvy Internet users. Some not-com addresses redirect to addresses with suffixes like “.com” or “.co.”

“People are much more attuned to all the quirky names out there,” says Heddi Cundle, whose online travel gift card company, myTab, uses “.travel” in its domain. Google’s parent

Expect to see more of them after Google’s announceme­nt last week that its new parent company, Alphabet, will have a website address of abc.xyz.

“Google’s action shifts not-coms from an interestin­g option to the ‘new normal,’ ” says Jeff Davidoff, chief marketing officer of Donuts, a company that owns some of the new suffixes.

The suffixes have been approved by the Internet Corporatio­n for Assigned Names and Numbers, the agency that oversees online addresses. Businesses, organizati­ons and individual­s can buy a domain from brokers known as domain registrars. These brokers, in turn, get the names from suffix wholesaler­s like Donuts, known as registries.

More than 6 million domains using the new suffixes have been registered, says Mike McLaughlin, a senior vice president at GoDaddy, a company that sells domains to the public. There are an estimated 150 million “.com” domains in use.

McLaughlin says that when people have a kernel of an idea, one of the first things they do is check on a name’s availabili­ty “to see if they can capture the essence of their idea in a name.” Not just startups

While many of the companies using the new suffixes are startups, establishe­d companies are also adopting not-coms. And some huge companies are getting their own suffixes, including the internatio­nal bank Barclays, which has “.barclays,” and delivery company FedEx, which is working on getting “.fedex.” Big corporatio­ns apply for suffixes with their own brands to be able to control how they’re used.

Republic Bike, a bicycle manufactur­er based in Dania Beach, Fla., goes with republic.bike.

Such an address is a good marketing strategy, appealing to tech-savvy customers who want the latest trends, says Avery Pack, president of the company that sells custommade bicycles, electronic locking devices and other gear to consumers and companies.

“It’s kind of a nod to our customers that what we’re doing is not traditiona­l,” Pack says.

The company uses republic.bike in ads. It still uses its original domain, republicbi­ke.com; when people type in republic. bike, they’re taken to the “.com” site.

 ?? Lynne Sladky / Associated Press ?? Avery Pack, president of Republic Bike, is using republic.bike for its website address. “It’s kind of a nod to our customers that what we’re doing is not traditiona­l,” Pack says. Other companies are also starting to use different Internet address...
Lynne Sladky / Associated Press Avery Pack, president of Republic Bike, is using republic.bike for its website address. “It’s kind of a nod to our customers that what we’re doing is not traditiona­l,” Pack says. Other companies are also starting to use different Internet address...

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