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Domaining Noise – How I Made It Stop

February 9, 3 Comments

Lately I’ve found myself getting distracted. There is too much noise in the industry and not enough real, fact-based, valuable information. I thought I’d share with you some strategies that are starting to get me more focused and back on track.

After sitting down, I thought about everything that was distracting me and/or was taking my time away from focusing on my goals. I then thought, what can I do to eliminate this? Here is what I did; I have:

  1. Stopped reading most of the “popular” domaining blogs, in particular the ones that churn out opinion pieces, day after day. Unless they have something valuable, I’m just not going to read them.
  2. No more RSS reader. It just aggregates crap and ties up my time – now gone.
  3. Decided not to go to any conferences this year. My time is valuable and I need to concentrate on building my portfolio, not going to the next “must attend” domaining conference at some exotic venue.
  4. Posting on forums. Don’t get me wrong, I like helping newbies ( I created the Domaining Wiki ), but I believe there is a better way of giving back to the community.
  5. Unsubscribed from HEAPS of mailing lists. As email is no longer coming in, I don’t have to read it.
  6. Unsubscribed from domains for sale lists. I figured that if people *really* want me to look at their portfolio, they will contact me. I don’t want to be on a “broadcast list”.
  7. Unsubscribed from conference announcements. I wont be attending them this year, so there is really no point.
  8. Unsubscribed from forum post / threads. Some forums I’ll still frequent, but I really don’t need to subscribe to the thread and get those notifications every time someone replies. This is too distracting.
  9. Unsubscribed from registrar marketing material. I have special discount pricing and unique coupons for me as a “bulk buyer” so there is no real point.
  10. Started renewing domains as soon as I could. Given the size of my portfolio, if I renew domains as soon as I’m able, then I receive less email. Some of the more valuables ones I’ve renewed for multiple years.

Why No Conferences In 2009?

1. I thought … when was the last time I *really* learned something new?

2. There are a lot of vendors pushing the same old crap, but just in a different city or country. They get paid to travel the world and do this. I don’t, and it ties up too much time.

3. What became of all those business cards I collected during my last conference? Did those “contacts” come in handy, or did it lead to a heap of Facebook and useless LinkedIn connections?

I must admit, cleaning out all that email was a lot like cleaning my garage. I felt free again!

What do you think? If this gives you a few things to think about, let me know. Its now gone 12:30am, so its off to bed to get some sleep – something else I need. Good night.

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Comments

Comment by Francois - February 9, 2009 @ 07:54 AM

More fast, less hassles, put your latop to the trashcan!

Comment by RabC - February 9, 2009 @ 09:54 AM

Excellent article. A recession kind of does that to you, make you refocus that is.

A lot of the boom years were just that, hype and fluff. I quit the forums around Xmas and apart from a quick glance at domaining.com to pick and choose a few interesting articles I just get on with my own business. A couple of the more prominent domainers are spewing out daily endless diatribe that is more self serving to their ego than for the benefit of domainers.

One occasional focused article with real content is better than daily rambling articles from “top” domainers. Usually those top domainer articles round on their ability to be continously ahead of the pack, even though they feel they were chastized by imaginary naysayers at the time they done whatever they think was so pioneering. :)

Quality over quantity any day.

Comment by David Harry - March 19, 2009 @ 07:31 PM

Yes, the last 5 years I have attended most international domain conferences and 2009 we only attended DomainFEST in January and reviewing the rest of the year in light of weak economy (AU dollar) and time etc.

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