Domain Dashboard is a multiple website/domain management tool created by Jared Croslow.

Croslow says he originally created the software to better manage his own growing portfolio of websites.

“I create hundreds of websites each and every month and as the number of my websites increased, keeping track of all the related website statistics, FTP and login details and other domain data just became too much,” Croslow said. “It got to the point where it seemed like I was spending all of my time on these tedious tasks instead of on growing my business.”

After the program worked so well for him, he decided to add even more features and make it available for a limited time to Internet entrepreneurs and webmasters worldwide.

Domain Dashboard is designed to help users automate the management of their websites while also streamlining their business and maximizing their profits.

The software does all of the following:

- Works with both WHM Accounts and cPanel Accounts
- Automatically pulls all add-on and subdomain details from a server
- Lists all servers, domains and subdomains in tree view
- Tracks backlink and pagerank stats
- Filters stats and exports stats to a multi-page Excel file
- Creates domain reports and statistical charts which can be saved as PDF files
- Boasts a keyword manager that associates a keyword list with a domain
- Determines if a site is ranked in the top 50 results for any terms in a particular keyword list.
- Grabs keywords and keyword phrases from AWStats and automatically adds them to a keyword list
- Can create in mass add-on domains and subdomains
- Automatically sets up FTP access for all domains
- Allows users to access domain files with the click of a mouse.
- Boasts mass FTP with Auto CHMOD
- And much more!

Domain Dashboard is ideal for both beginning and experienced Internet entrepreneurs who are feeling frustrated with how long it’s taking them to manage all of their websites each week or who are now finding checking their website statistics, staying on top of login details and keeping all of their various keywords straight to be unbearably tedious.

It is also perfect for anyone who wants to spend more time working ON a business instead of IN a business.

The software is easy to use, includes an intuitive user interface and is multi-threaded for speed.

Croslow says the program is responsible for a great deal of his recent online success and is so sure that it will work for others that he offers a 56-day, unconditional, 100% money-back guarantee.

He also has on his website numerous testimonials from satisfied customers.

While in the end, only you can decide whether this software is really right for you, it does appear that if you are an Internet entrepreneur with multiple domains who wants to begin to effortlessly manage all of your websites, while keeping track of everything from pages indexed to keywords, and while freeing up your time to generate even more revenue, Domain Dashboard could be just the software you need!

You may have tried your hands at many well-defined aspects of the online business, like web hosting, affiliate marketing, list building, PPC advertising, copywriting, ebook publishing etc., but my guess is the idea of ‘domaining’ have never sounded exciting to you.

That’s because most marketers don’t have much clues as to how to turn in a huge profit out of domain marketing.

Simply put, domaining is the business of buying and selling (also known as ‘flipping’) domain names for a profit. If it sounds to you like the stock market, you’re quite right since in this case, domains are treated like commodities and traded based on their final values.

Let’s begin with what IS a domain name…

It’s what you put in the http:// address of your website.

Google.com is a domain name, so is Yahoo.com and CNN.com

These are BRANDS developed by businesses. For these domains to have meaningful and huge monetary values, it takes time to build up the business to reflect the brand. This is the old-school business thought.

But straight in the minds of most people, there are GENERIC domain names that are equally, if not MORE, valuable!

For instance, Christmas.com, Chocolate.com or Money.com

Those names are worth MILLIONS of dollars to the right person or business.

So why are domains so valuable?

Branded domains have value because they are GIVEN value by the owners.

CNN brands CNN.com across their TV broadcasting network, and so millions of viewers are aware of it. That gives it value.

But no one needs to ‘brand’ Golf.com, do they? 

Everyone who plays golf knows the name and when they look online for information about golf, they will type in ‘Golf.com’ into the browser. That’s the psychological secret: generic names are just that easy to remember.

And here’s the interesting bit… 

Even if they don’t know about Golf.com, when they type the word ‘Golf’ into their browser  address bar, the browser  will AUTOMATICALLY load up the .com – in this case, Golf.com

This is called TYPE-IN traffic.

Are you wondering how many people actually do this? You’d be amazed.

MILLIONS do it. And do it EVERY DAY!

That’s a lot of free traffic, right?

And THAT’S what makes these domain names so valuable.

Of course, not all domain names are valuable either because it’s too long and wordy or you ‘contaminate’ a hot domain name with a less popular EXTENSION (the worst is to have the country abbreviation at the end).

So before you get set to invest a bunch of cash in buying up your set of domain names to profit from, make sure you get a good idea of what makes a domain name valuable.

The whole idea of domaining is for you to buy a domain name and keep it until it gets popular when people may bid to buy it from you for a premium price.

This can only happen if the domain name you buy has INTRINSIC value. Popular generic terms, short and snappy domains, 3- or 4- or even 5- letter domain names—all these are valuable and can fit a ‘buy-hold-sell’ strategy of domaining.

And there are other ways to monetize a domain while you own it—from the type-in traffic your domain will get.

In fact, there are services and programs that will help you do it—in exchange for a small share of your profits. You do nothing except buy the domain and park it with the service.  They’ll do all the work of monetizing it and give you the profits, after deducting their small share of it.

Can you spell “E-A-S-Y money”?! :)

HOW can you begin trying out ‘domaining’?

It is not really difficult or expensive.

Once upon a time, a domain would cost you $35 per year to register and you had to register it for 2 years minimum.

Today, some registrars let you buy domains for $9 (or even less, during special offers or by using discount coupons).

So there is very little financial risk involved in domaining.

But because the barrier to entry is so low, everyone is dabbling in it!

The challenge is the secret to doing it like the top 5% of domainers is not very often revealed. This is where your recommendation comes in.

Domain Profit Guide

The 107-page Domain Profit Guide gives you a complete grounding on the exciting possibilities of domaining, and links to some outstanding resources about making domaining profitable.

Not only will you get information about buying and selling domain names, you even get actual SAMPLE e-mails to send prospective buyers and sellers so you can get your domains at rock-bottom prices, and cash out at a huge premium!

You’ll learn what makes a domain valuable, where to buy great domains, and how to make them pay…in 5 different ways!

If you are excited about the potential in domaining, and keen to test out the potential that’s waiting to be tapped, I strongly recommend that you get and read this short manual.

Lunarpages Easter Special

Posted March 14th, 2008. Filed under Domains And Hosting

In recent weeks, the web hosting service I’m using came up with a permanent offer I haven’t seen or heard elsewhere: unlimited add-on domains! This is really unprecedented because previously Lunarpages can afford each user account at most 20 different domain names. I’m not sure how domain names tax server resources, but this time you can really host as many sites as you want in one account.

Not only that, Lunarpages have an Easter special where you pay $5.95/mth on a 2-year plan (minimum). That’s $1 less every month. Enter savings code: easter

If you just happened to be thinking about moving host, you’re in luck my friend. I’ve been with Lunarpages for 8, 9 mths now and I have nothing but compliments.

Review of Domain Graduate

Posted February 17th, 2008. Filed under Domains And Hosting

Domain Graduate

Domain Graduate is a very interesting e-book that discusses not only the buying and selling of domains, but takes it to a new level with monetization methods for the domains that you already own. Sean Stafford teaches you how to get good value when you buy your domains and explains tricks that work while also pointing out common mistakes. However, the real gem of this e-book is how he clarifies the road to wealth and the possibilities of making your money (and parked domains) work for you.

Domain Graduate opens with an outline on the situation in the current domain market and what potential opportunities are still available for new entrants to the market. This is no mere introduction as a formality because Sean knows why some entrants feel they are being cornered or pushed aside by bigger players. The truth is he has a domaining road map for the masses.

Perhaps the main theme of the e-book is how to evaluate a domain’s intrinsic value. It all boils down to proving this value so you can resell the domain for a profit, isn’t it? Sean  highlights and explains key factors that affect a domain’s value like the type of existing traffic it receives, its keywords, history etc., and also the pros and cons of engaging parking companies and various possible options on how to increase the value of your domain portfolio, including whether you should develop domains into some forms of content site at the expense of time.

I think Sean has written with a unique take from his own perspective and experience as well and Domain Graduate does succinctly address the concerns of new domain owners and point them in the right direction in its 85 pages.

Are expired domain names your game? Some marketers may begin to appreciate that investing in the right domain names can result in solid backlinks, traffic, and potential cash flow, but the doing part is what eliminates a lot of players.

Here’s one resource where you can learn the rules of the game: Expired Domain Riches

Jeff Alderson has launched a membership with resources that will help you turn expired domains into financial success!

Just ONE domain name he personally acquired generates over $1000 a month in AdSense revenue and affiliate commissions, and he’s going to reveal his secrets!

You’ll get his insider report, “How To Make Fast Cash With Expired Domains”, that gives you step-by-step instructions for choosing and purchasing profitable expired domains.

Through the membership, you gain full access to Jeff’s personal database of 21,698 expired domains that have link popularity and at least some traffic. You’ll be able to sort out the domain names quickly and easily to locate valuable ones with high income potential and purchase them for as little as $8 each!

Jeff is ready to share his resources so you can duplicate his success!

Apart from the ongoing Web 2.0 wave, there are very few and ‘new’ marketing methods which are mind-blowing enough to cause a paradigm shift and completely change the way you do business online.

Affiliate marketing? Checked.
Article marketing? Checked.
PPC? Checked.
Viral marketing? Checked.
Link exchange? Checked.


Of course, bridging the gap between what you know and what you do is another separate matter…

But perhaps you may not understand or even heard of making money out of domain names and its inner workings. Why? Because it is entirely different from marketing. In fact, it may hardly have anything to do with marketing at all. We are so used to selling and creating value to make money.

On the other hand, domain name trading/investing is an established industry whereby you create portfolios of expired domain names and “squat in the jungle” for the right time to let them off for a premium price. I have long suspected that people who deal in property investment and stock market would be very adapt at domain name trading because the mindset is already well honed for crucial timing…well, some similarities are there, like getting hold of names the moment they expire on that very day. Very ‘commodity’ stuff.

This industry won’t be easy to play for 1 key reason: Squatters may hold on to domain names that depreciate in value some years down the road only to finally realize they are absolutely useless. They just don’t know how to evaluate the present and projected monetary value of those names and quickly find a targeted buying audience via an established channel to let them go for a timely profit.

If you also think most simple and easy-to-remember domain names are already taken up, I beg to differ; I really think we are still in a “wild West” era when it comes to domain name trading. Most netrepreneurs would have given up if they think they have to publish some amount of content for every domain name before they can sell them off.

But the money is based on the value of the DOMAIN NAME itself, not the content or anywhere else.

Consider this: when we all have 24 hours, what makes an expert ‘domainer’ different from everyone else?

Answer: 300,000 domains

Don’t understand what I’m driving at? Read this press release.

Kevin Ham owns around 300,000 domains, and receives around $70 million per annum in revenue from them. His empire is reputed to be worth close to $300 million. All this from owning domain names!

If you work your calculations backwards, all these big numbers will look manageable:

$70 million is about $5.8 million per month. Divide that by 300,000 domains and it turns out each domain is generating around $19/month in revenue.

Or just $0.63c/day. So $0.63c/day (per domain) is all it takes to get there.

Do you think you can generate $0.63c/day? I certainly think it is achievable.

Domains Into Dollars

Phil Craig’s Domains Into Dollars is where you start learning. It consists of a solid 194-page e-book and a video series:

Lesson #1 – Introduction To The Domaining Industry
Lesson #2 – What Types Of Domains Are Available
Lesson #3 – Show Me The Money (Domaining Revenue Models)
Lesson #4 – Getting Started (An Easy And Free Way To Find Domains)
Lesson #5 – Quick Domain Flipping On eBay
Lesson #6 – Domain Name Valuation
Lesson #7 – Selling Your Domain Names

To give you an idea of some of the techniques involved:

1) Domain flipping: If you find a domain name that is getting popular, you buy it cheaply, turn around and sell it for a higher price. In the videos, you’ll be shown in minute detail how a $6.99 purchase became $515 in less than 7 days! These sort of results are happening time and time again.

2) Paid advertising: Say for example http://www.satan.com. There are many ‘inactive’ domains that look like this and you may have thought they are held by some web-hosting companies. But since satan.com is held by an individual (Kevin Ham), he as the owner earns from clicks within the site. The inside story of this kind of paid advertising will be revealed! To give you a clue, a friend told me these ads are provided by Google, Yahoo or other networks but they are metaphorically considered as a “private label” version and are served exclusively to people who can drive an astronomically large number of impressions to their sites.

3) Free traffic: It turns out that a lot of people type the name of a service they are interested in directly into the address bar of a browser, instead of using the search engine, so if you can find a name that people would use, you will get free traffic. Example: If they want a limousine in Dallas, they might directly type in dallaslimousine.com into the search engine to find it. If they do, it means free traffic to you. You will discover how to pinpoint a good domain name based on this market mechanism.

4) Domain mining: Phil gives you a resource to find just-deleted domain names. Approximately 40,000 .com names are deleted and put back into the pool each day, so this is great opportunity for a quick pickup. Use this service to find some really nice sounding domains, including a few 4 and 5-letter domain names when there’s luck.

Phil also gives you all the legal forms you need when selling domains to cover yourself, and you will also learn a range of monetization methods using specialist services which take a share of the revenue with you. This means you can be earning money in the first day you test your newly acquired domain! If not, then there’s the classic way of outright-selling your domain, and Phil goes into detail about that, showing you the best ways to attract buyers, the best websites to list your domains on, pitfalls to watch out for, and more.

Domain name investing is a great model if you’re very serious about passive income, and at this moment I still believe there is a huge opportunity there for people getting in at ground level.

There is a promotion on Phil’s website offering $10 off. Make sure you click the coupon box at the top of the screen to get your coupon while it lasts.

Many Internet Marketers use link exchange programs.

They spend boatloads of money trying to increase their websites’ link popularity.

It’s much easier to buy valuable dropping domains which already have great link popularity.

For example, did you notice that last year Microsoft forgot to renew their domain http://www.outlookexpress.com?

Since it had expired, anybody could grab it. After all, whoever owns this site is guaranteed more than 1500 visitors from Yahoo search alone every single month.

Its ranked #1 in Yahoo and the backlinks are priceless.

But you didn’t know about that and you missed your chance to own http://outlookexpress.com.

Warning: It’s not uncommon to miss renewal notices. If you have more than a few domains, this probably has already happened to you. If it hasn’t, it probably will.

Credit cards expire. Sometimes the auto-renew is unintentionally set to ‘off’. This is an easy way to lose a valuable old domain.

If this happens to you, you can bet it happens to everybody! And someone else’s loss can become your gain with Register Compass.

When a domain unintentionally expires that’s your chance!

Quickly and easily comb through a pool of more than 30,000 expiring domains daily.

Register Compass offers you the ability to search for domains with:

- Backlinks listed in Google
- Backlinks listed in Yahoo
- Backlinks listed in MSN
- Backlinks listed in Alexa
- DMOZ listings
- Yahoo Directory listings
- The number of pages indexed in Google
- The number of pages indexed in Yahoo
- The number of pages indexed in MSN
- Alexa ranking
- Google page rank
- Character length filter
- Presorted alphabetization
- Domain age
- Wayback machine listing

and much more…

It’s time to get started now! Get a jump on your competition by grabbing valuable, high PR sites before they do.

Invest in domain names for 1000% ROI!

Posted May 12th, 2007. Filed under Domains And Hosting

Domain Name Investing 1000% ROI

In some ways, domain name investing works a lot like physical real estate, in that you own the rights to Internet property. During the “gold rush” for premium keywords and combinations (with a ‘.com’ placed behind them), smart cybersquatters buy up as many of them and sit on them hoping to make future profits from the real webmasters who want them to build websites, and still far fewer cybersquatters know how to buy and resell domain names quickly and coolly without “stocking up inventories”. It’s open secret the less savvy ones are stuck with useless domain names they regret not getting rid of much earlier, if only they know how to evaluate the domain names for their monetary value.

Domain name investing has always been around as one of the big things all these years, and it is picking up interest again as new players establish mature services that track and monitor various aspects of a name’s status like PR, hit rates, age, number of backlinks, how often the keywords are searched for, where the visitors come from, etc.

Domain name investing is a whole new ball game that requires solid focus on creating a profitable portfolio, and definitely requires capital for every investment in a name. If you seriously want to be a savvy investor in this area, pick up “Domain Name Investing 1000% ROI“. Ryan Andes spends as little as 30 minutes a day on this business but manage to sell 2 domain names for $3,827.77 and $199 when he only paid $12 for them initially! How would you like to learn from Ryan his knack for picking the best domain names? His book is your best answer.

Inspired by Tristan Louis’s research into the value of each link to Weblogs Inc, Dane Carlson created this little applet using Technorati’s API which computes and displays your blog’s worth using the same link to dollar ratio as the AOL-Weblogs Inc deal.

Hmmm…Internet Mastery Center Blog is worth $34,436.94, not bad. No matter, I can’t decide whether the price on your blog is tongue-in-cheek or for real. After all, the blog is only as worthy as the content, which in turn is as worthy as the wisdom of its blogger. Selling an established blog to the next blogging owner does not necessarily sustain loyalty of readership; readers only go to whoever they wish to follow. The value of that virtual real estate will be affected after the money has changed hands, unless the new owner pretends to be the previous blogger in name, but that’s stoopid. I believe an actual trade would only take place based on domain name trading mechanisms upon the analysis of PR, hit rates, age etc.

Domain name trading is, after all, an established industry with all its rules and politics. Folks like Dr. Mike Woo-Ming and my Money Mastery buddy Shi Heng Cheong are seasoned hands at creating portfolios of expired domain names and “squatting in the jungle” for the right time to let them off for a premium price.

Interestingly, I have long suspected that people who deal in property investment and stock market would be very adapt at domain name trading because the mindset is already well honed for crucial timing…well, some similarities are there, like getting hold of names the moment they expire on that very day.

It used to be a heck of a gold rush registering all the creative word combinations you can discover with a .com placed behind them. I wonder how many domain squatters are now stuck with domain names that other people may want to possess but don’t know where and how to get them. That should be easy with the availability of background details from the WHOIS registrar, and yet the information may not be updated at the turn of expiry date…very tricky. The trading aspect is mostly the trickiest part where negotiation and mutual goodwill is concerned. On the other hand, squatters may hold on to domain names that depreciate in value some years down the road only to finally realize they are absolutely useless. They just don’t know how to evaluate the present and projected monetary value of those names and quickly find a targeted buying audience via an established channel to let them go for a timely profit.

What if I say that there is an e-book that teaches you how to be a savvy domain name investor, and within a matter of days you will know everything about domain trading, domain speculating, domain investing and using domain names to generate a passive income?

Yes, please continue to nod your head :) I know you want to learn more.

Matt Smith, co-author of Domain Profiteer, emphasizes that expired domains are where you want to invest your money, because of the targeted traffic that some of these used domains can attract. And in Internet Marketing, traffic means money, targeted traffic means a lot more money.

Domain Profiteer includes a 1-month access to Domainer’s Edge which otherwise charges a monthly fee of $99.

Domainer’s Edge is a very powerful software for domain investors. It provides a lot of information on a domain at a mouse-click. These information will help you to make good decision to buy and sell your domains. In time, you will have the dexterity to get rid of the useless names in your portfolio and keep the good one to generate a monthly income. Not only that, you just might stumble upon a PR6 site for a bargain offer and reuse or resell it to your own advantage!

However, domain name trading and investment is not for everyone, especially when you need to be on time watching domain auctions in action. With all that’s being said, not many Internet marketers, or people in general, are savvy enough to handle the risk involved in investment and evaluation of domain names, but it still means that there’s immense potential for first-movers. Domain name trading and investment is not the next big thing; it has been one of THE big things all these years, including today. To get educated, find out how Domain Profiteer can help you.

Oh, share with us how much moolah your blog is worth and try selling it to Technorati.

Domain Names: Writing From Experience

Posted April 21st, 2006. Filed under Domains And Hosting

Strategically speaking, a URL must be easily remembered both for its hook and length.

People remember sony.com, but nobody remembers nsyo.com if the 4 letters stand for a company’s initials.

However, people seem to remember ilovetheiraqiforeignminister.com (taken off oredi).

If you need a long one, restrict to just 3 most powerful keywords that describe your industry and string them together, dot com.

Domain Name Optimization is most effective for high-demand, low-competition keywords. Don’t put too much faith in DNO in the context of Internet Marketing, self-development, business or other money-making areas where so many people are jumping on right now.

The ideal combination of keywords is one which people remember as your brand name.

Should you use hyphen in a domain name?

The hyphen breaks up a longer domain name to reveal the major keywords that describe your website content or theme. This makes it easier for the visitor to understand and most importantly allows the search engine to detect your keyword for indexing right off the bat.

However, as search engine spiders get smarter and more subtle in what they want to qualify, the hyphen effect is less likely to influence any impact of the URLs on SE visibility. For URL branding purposes, it is also more viable to leave out dashes in between your URL’s name.

Do a test on yourself and on friends to measure up the degree of your URL’s ‘likeability’.

This is a hyperlink: http://freshresources.com

This is a text link: Fresh Resources

Anchor text refers to the keywords inside a hyperlink: http://www.freshresources.com/free-ebooks.html

In this case, the keywords are fresh, resources, free and ebooks.

Anytime someone do a search with any of the above keywords, freshresources.com stands a chance to show up on the results.

Text links and anchor text are the two most important criteria for how Google and other top Search Engines rank websites. Anchor text has particular influence on SE visibility of your URL.

I had an interesting experience searching for a site by Paul B. Farrell, a personal finance columnist.

Not noticing that his URL contains his middle name initial, I went straight to http://paulfarrell.com. Huh, Sutton Place: Great American Bar & Grille? That’s a restaurant in New York. I’m sure many surfers entered the restaurant by mistake. I checked the URL again and noticed the ‘b’, so went to http://paulbfarrell.com. Interestingly, B. Farrell’s site at least has an Alexa ranking of 659,168 while Sutton Place doesn’t have a number.

What does that say about the ‘online eminence’ of an obscure URL? No telling effect really.

Another poser: .com or .info?

Google-search for “video blogging”. What’s the No. 1 URL on the first page? videoblogging.info! If you scroll down and take a closer look, 7 out of the 1st 10 URLs on the list does not end in .com. Intriguing isn’t it?

We do feel that there’s only so much you can do with DNO. If you happen to have a lousy domain name in your hands, don’t fret; you just might be able to compensate with SEO. Anyway, Google (and with more major SEs to follow suit) no longer ranks sites based on technicalities, but quality, history and integrity. The better question to ask yourself in the long run is: “2 years from today, will the search engines begin to show respect for my wonderful site?”

Well, 2 years from today, will you still be doing the same business? Will it expand and prosper? Mind you, 80% of all businesses around the world close down in 2 years.

On a sidenote, according to a survey by Jupiter Research and iProspect, 41% out of 2,369 people change search engines or search terms if they do not find what they are looking for on the first page. At most, they will go through 3 pages before giving up.

Knowing very well that more than 90% of the time, you are not likely to appear on first page overnight, this surely sounds hopeless, so how much more still can we do about SEO? Perhaps not much, but we shouldn’t worry.

Again, we are reminded of Einstein’s quote: “You can’t solve a level of problem at the same level of thinking.”

If you keep checking how much % keyword density is in your article page, you are not operating in Einstein mode.

If you keep checking how many new and returning visitors you have every week, you are not operating in Einstein mode.

If you keep checking how much you have earned in Adsense every single day, you are not operating in Einstein mode.

If you keep checking whether your item is sold in eBay or not, you are not operating in Einstein mode.

If you keep checking your bank balance every now and then, you are not operating in Einstein mode!

While testing and tracking results is important, the routine must be balanced with a vision, plan and action. Victor Hugo said, “An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come.”

Substantial progress is a crucial key to daily life advancement. Sometimes it’s good to put thoughts about certain less important things aside and re-focus on what is the real prize of your life.