Introduction
In a period from 1994-2000 the Internet has excited the nation
and the world like no technology had done before. Consider
this, in 1992, there were 50 Web sites in the world. The numbers
have changed dramatically over one decade. The total number
of domains registered world wide show this increase very vividly.*
Note the decline in total registered and .COM domain names
from 2001 to 2002.
| Year |
Registered Domains |
Registered
.COM |
 |
| 2001 |
36,043,542 |
22,373,097 |
| 2002 |
30,750,092 |
21,230,351 |
 |
Also note the increase from 2002 to tdoay (1/16/2008) in
the number of active .com and total active domains as shown
in the following tables. The change in the numbers is quite informative as they show a significant upward trend.
| |
|
| |
| |
60,667,069 |
178,239,531 |
1,092,857 |
1,042,588 |
184,640 |
.Com |
8,787,975 |
19,220,762 |
114,384 |
89,014 |
19,601 |
.Net |
5,456,944 |
16,466,631 |
78,892 |
49,034 |
4,890 |
.Org |
3,839,120 |
3,806,632 |
22,464 |
10,815 |
9,303 |
.Info |
1,567,651 |
901,419 |
3,450 |
2,001 |
2,870 |
.Biz |
1,177,047 |
880,820 |
1,635 |
1,016 |
2,792 |
.Us |
| |
| 81,627,641 |
220,177,372 |
1,313,682 |
1,194,468 |
224,096 |
Total |
| |
71,750,465 |
254,997,328 |
316,008 |
79,291 |
100,721 |
.Com |
10,680,144 |
26,634,136 |
39,420 |
12,997 |
14,731 |
.Net |
6,412,402 |
18,757,978 |
8,284 |
2,824 |
5,900 |
.Org |
4,928,391 |
5,427,942 |
6,331 |
6,912 |
7,671 |
.Info |
1,909,972 |
1,209,895 |
3,330 |
978 |
1,436 |
.Biz |
1,380,010 |
1,057,829 |
1,830 |
474 |
1,150 |
.Us |
| |
97,193,219 |
308,746,685 |
375,203 |
103,476 |
131,609 |
Total |
Last Updated : 2008-01-15 |
Source: http://www.domaintools.com/internet-statistics/ |
The meteoric rise in the Internet's popularity and the promise
of fortunes resulted in a "dot-com" rush, high speculations,
astronomical stock prices, many millionaires, and more Porsche's
on the road. Probably more people learned such terms like
IPO, stock options, and venture capital because of the constant
reporting of the new companies and their promise of fortunes
in the media.
Now that most of those "dot-com"s have become "not-com"s,
more Porsche's have been auctioned off, afternoon massage
sessions are fond memories for some, we need to regroup and
try to understand what went wrong. No doubt that:
- Marketing is heavily intertwined with communication at
many levels
- The extraordinary growth of e-commerce and the failure
of many requires a new look at the marketing approaches
suitable for the Internet
- The Internet offers many opportunities in very efficient
customer support and customer service, how do we tap into
this resource?
- Marketing on the Internet offers opportunities and efficiencies
in many aspects of marketing and synergies between brick-and-mortar
retailing and e-tailing has become more apparent then before.
(The previous sentence has been a part of my syllabus for
several years now and it sounds more plausible now than
it did before.) How do we capitalize on the synergies between
the real and the virtual worlds?
Description and objectives
This course will offer an opportunity to explore the impact
of information technology on the practice of marketing. Although
marketing on the Internet will be the main focus, the course
will investigate technology issues that may go beyond it.
Students will learn the dimensions of the Internet, its capabilities
and limitations, the basics of the communications technology
that drive the Internet. A significant component of this course
will require learning how to design a reasonably complex Web
site for marketing purposes. You will spend much time on and
off your computer designing your Web site, creating content
for it, and implementing your design ideas in the final product
with a marketing purpose.

Students should aim to achieve the following by the end of
the semester:
- Discover the uses of the Internet for marketing
- Learn how the Internet works and how this technology may
affect marketing
- Learn to use the common client side tools of the Internet
efficiently and effectively: e-mail, Web browsing and FTP
- Create marketing oriented Web sites consisting of multi-page
HTML documents that stand as a cohesive whole
Equipped with the foundation knowledge, the class will look
at marketing in this new framework and utilize their knowledge
of marketing and the communications technology to practice
marketing on the Internet. At the end of this semester you
will have obtained a valuable skill, creating Web sites, and
a context for that skill, marketing. You will find this combination
quite helpful when having job interviews.
* "Latest Domain Stats", http://www.domainstats.com/,
2 August 2002.
Note:
As of 1 August 2003, the above numbers were 33,282,713 and
23,841,755 (Detailed Domain Counts and Internet Statistic,
http://www.whois.sc/internet-statistics/)
As of 22 December 2006, the above numbers were 81,627,641
and 60,667,069 (Domain Counts & Internet Statistics, http://www.domaintools.com/internet-
statistics/)
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