Difference between revisions of "ENom"

From ICANNWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 23: Line 23:
 
[[Billy Watenpaugh]], Product Manager and Registry Liaison<br>
 
[[Billy Watenpaugh]], Product Manager and Registry Liaison<br>
 
[[Chris Ambler]], Chief Software Strategist<br>
 
[[Chris Ambler]], Chief Software Strategist<br>
[[Paul Stahura]], Chief Strategy Officer
 
 
}}
 
}}
  

Revision as of 17:05, 16 September 2011

Enom logo.gif
Type: Privately Held
Industry: Internet, online domain name registration
Founded: Bellevue, WA, 1997
Founder(s): Paul Stahura
Ownership: Demand Media, 2006
Headquarters: 15801 NE 24th Street
St. Bellevue, WA 98008
Country: USA
Website: eNom.com
Twitter: TwitterIcon.png@eNom
Key People
Taryn Naidu, General Manager

Chris Sheridan, Vice President of Sales
John Kane, Vice President of Business Development
Sarah Akhtar, General Counsel
Billy Watenpaugh, Product Manager and Registry Liaison
Chris Ambler, Chief Software Strategist

eNom, is ICANN accredited and the world's second-largest domain name registrar, providing domain name registration, hosting and other online services.[1][2] Paul Stahura founded the company in 1997.[3]

In May 2006 eNom was acquired by Demand Media, and in 2007 eNom acquired BulkRegister.[4]

Company History

In 2007, eNom became the second largest domain registrar in the world,[5] with over 8 million registered domain names and 70 different domain extensions.[6] eNom's resellers are mostly web hosting and web development companies that use eNom's application programming interface (API) to buy and sell domain names on their own web sites, or eNom's hosted reseller solution—a customer retail website branded as the reseller's but hosted by eNom.

Their back-end systems can handle about 2 billion DNS queries a day, and maintains its name server constellation across six datacenters around the world. They forward over 11 million emails and block over 28 million spam messages every day.[7]

In October, 2007, eNom sunsetted its drop catcher website, ClubDrop.com to partner with Network Solutions to create the aftermarket auction venue NameJet.com. NameJet became the auction venue for the expired domain inventory of Network Solutions.

The site auctions active names, dropped names, and names that are post-expiration.[8] Much of the Network Solutions inventory is classified as "Pre-Release" names. Features include: public auctions, private auctions, ascending-price and reverse auctions, proxy bidding, reserve price auctions, buy-it-now auctions.

eNom's Reseller Model

eNom sets up resellers two ways, through eNom's PDQ tool, a semi-customizable domain name selling kit, or through the API.

eNom resellers add revenue streams to their domain name businesses by offering eNom's Value Added Services (VAS). eNom's VAS products and services include web site hosting, web site creation kits, SSL Certificates, ID protection services, email services, website monitoring and traffic-counting tools.

Affiliations

References

External Links