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The GoDaddy Group, Inc.
Company typePrivate company
IndustryDomain Registrar
Founded1997
HeadquartersScottsdale, Arizona, USA
Key people
Bob Parsons
ProductsWeb services
Revenue2,231,900,000 United States dollar (2017) Edit this on Wikidata
154,000,000 United States dollar (2017) Edit this on Wikidata
Number of employees
5,990 (2017) Edit this on Wikidata
Websitehttp://www.godaddy.com/

Go Daddy is an Internet domain registrar and web hosting company, which also sells e-business related software and services. GoDaddy is known for its sexually-suggestive Super Bowl commercials, but also for a number of controversies related to how it deals with complaints against customers' websites.

History

Founded in 1997 by Bob Parsons, who previously founded the software development company Parsons Technology, Inc., Go Daddy has become the largest ICANN-accredited registrar and the first registrar to surpass Network Solutions in total domain names registered. The Go Daddy Group currently has more than 27 million domains under management and registers, renews or transfers a domain every second. Go Daddy won the CNET Editor's Choice award in 2001 and the Name Intelligence Largest Net Gain Award in both 2002 and 2003, jumping from fifth largest registrar to third largest overall, trailing only Network Solutions RegisterGenius.com and Tucows[citation needed]. The Go Daddy Group, which includes Wild West Domains (its resale brand) as well as Blue Razor (its bulk domain brand), is currently the largest registrar in the world.[1]

Since Go Daddy's expanded growth into the information technology industry, it has participated in activities concerning the Internet in general. In the recent past, Go Daddy sued VeriSign, Inc., over the Site Finder controversy which put a wildcard in all domain names causing a web site from VeriSign, Inc. to appear if the domain name had not been registered. This event caused controversy over VeriSign's role as the sole maintainer of the .com and .net domain names. VeriSign pulled the wildcard service after a letter from ICANN. Go Daddy was also more recently sued by Web.com for patent infringement.[2][3]

Go Daddy gained market share against competitor Network Solutions, surpassing them to become the largest domain registrar on April 26, 2005.[4] Speculation into the reasons for this include lower prices by Go Daddy for domain registrations, and the expansion of their product line.[citation needed]

In 2005, GoDaddy criticized the US Department of Commerce for disallowing private registrations of .us domains.[5]

Awards

Go Daddy has won the Arizona Corporate Excellence Award for fastest growing privately held company in 2003 and Named Arizona Hot Growth Company in 2004.[citation needed] Nationally, Go Daddy has been ranked #102 on the Inc. 500 list of fastest-growing privately held companies of 2005.[6] Of the privately held technology companies on the list, Go Daddy ranked #1. Ed Denison Business Leader of the Year, awarded to Bob Parsons at the Arizona Governor's 2005 Innovation Celebration. Go Daddy has also been ranked #20 on the 2005 Deloitte Technology Fast 500.[citation needed] Go Daddy, headquartered in Scottsdale, Arizona, has also been listed among the "Best Places to Work in the Valley" for four consecutive years (2004-2007.) In 2007, it was named to Deloitte Technologies Fast 500, which cites the nation's fastest growing technology companies. Go Daddy was also names "Best Registrar" by Domain Name Wire in 2007. [1]

Marketing

Go Daddy's advertising is produced in house, and typically emphasizes sexually suggestive material. Featured on their website, most of Go Daddy's commercials began with the 2005 Super Bowl advertisement, and from there went further to other television stations, with many being rejected for content. CEO Bob Parsons refers to the marketing as "GoDaddy-esque" which he describes as "fun, edgy and a bit inappropriate."[7]

Most of Go Daddy's early TV ads starred current WWE Diva Candice Michelle, in some sort of sexual-related theme. Candice Michelle has been referred to as "Miss GoDaddy.com" or "The Go Daddy Girl" by fans and on WWE TV shows, where she also does the "Go Daddy Dance" (twirling her arms around her body while slowly turning) as part of her wrestling gimmick. In 2006, Go Daddy began sponsoring IndyCar driver Danica Patrick, who subsequently joined "The Go Daddy Girl" lineup, and began playing a prominent role in the registrar's commercials. In late 2007, Olympic swimmer and model Amanda Beard became the third Go Daddy Girl.



2008 Super Bowl advertisement

On August 13, 2007 Bob Parsons announced that Go Daddy may be sitting out Super Bowl XLII. "There's always the possibility that we might not be able to get an appropriately edgy ad approved," he said. "All things considered, there's a strong argument for staying on the sidelines this year and taking that Super Bowl advertising money and using it for other opportunities," he added. [2] However, on January 28, 2008, during a telecast of World Wrestling Entertainment's RAW program on USA Network in a reverse of field, it was disclosed by Go Daddy spokesperson (and WWE diva) Candice Michelle that there will be an ad during the game, which featured a "behind the scenes" look into that ad.

Once again, Go Daddy went through more than a dozen submissions before it was able to get a commercial approved by Fox, the same network that had pulled its 2005 ad before its second scheduled airing. Go Daddy had hoped to broadcast a spot called "Exposure" featuring Go Daddy Girl Danica Patrick and animatronics beavers. But Fox deemed the spot to racy for prime time television and told Parsons it would not air it unless he removed the word "beaver." [3]

Parsons refused, and Go Daddy instead aired a completely different commercial, called "Spot On." The spot was essentially an "Ad to an Ad," and told viewers to go to the company's website to see "Exposure."

"Spot On" aired in the first quarter of Super Bowl XLII, and the company quickly deemed it an enormous success. Go Daddy logged more than one million views of the "Exposure" ad before the game ended and reported 1.5 million visits to the GoDaddy.com Website. [4]

Reactions

The 2008 Go Daddy ad has been both maligned and praised. Ad Week's Barbara Lippert described it a "poorly produced scene in a living room where people are gathered to watch the Super Bowl. As we watch them watch, a guy at his computer in the corner of the room drags the crowd over to GoDaddy.com to view the banned ad instead."

But Lippert, like others, also acknowledges the shrewdness of the PR strategy, saying "it will probably produce a Pavlovian response in getting actual viewers in their own living rooms to do the same." [5]

Go Daddy's 2007 Super Bowl ad was criticized, in The New York Times as being "cheesy";[8] in National Review as "raunchy, 'Girls-Gone-Wild' style";[9] and "just sad" by Barbara Lippert in Adweek, who gave the ad a "D".[10]

However, Reprise Media, reviewing the success of Super Bowl advertising in getting potential customers online, listed the 2007 commercial as one of only eight "Touchdown"-worthy ads among the day's high-priced advertisers.[11] IAG Research, which rated the effectiveness of likeability and memorability of the ads, ranked Go Daddy's spot as second for most-recalled.[12]

Philanthropy

In April 2006, the company donated $10,000 to the OpenSSH development program, which is managed by OpenBSD.[13] They have also donated $10,000 in March 2006 to Perverted-Justice.com in which volunteers pose online as minors to find child predators and report them to law enforcement.[14]

Controversies

GoDaddy has a history of closing sites belonging to its customers[15] when controversial material is posted on web sites operated by those customers without notifying them of the take-downs or requesting that they remove material themselves before acting on their customer's behalf.

Suspension of Seclists.org

On January 24, 2007, Go Daddy deactivated the domain of computer security site, Seclists.Org, taking 250,000 pages of security content offline.[16] The shutdown resulted from a complaint from MySpace to Go Daddy regarding usernames and passwords posted a week earlier to the full-disclosure mailing list and archived on the Seclists.org site as well as many other websites. Seclists.org administrator Gordon Lyon, who goes by the handle "Fyodor", provided logs to CNET News.com showing Go Daddy de-activated the domain 52 seconds after leaving him a voicemail, and he had to go to great lengths to get the site reactivated. Go Daddy general counsel Christine Jones stated that Go Daddy's terms of service "reserves the right to terminate your access to the services at any time, without notice, for any reason whatsoever." Lyon has since launched the web site NoDaddy.Com to Criticize GoDaddy policies. [17]

Deletion of FamilyAlbum.com

On December 19, 2006 GoDaddy received a third party complaint of invalid domain contact information in the Whois database for the domain FamilyAlbum.com.[18] GoDaddy wrote a letter to the owner of FamilyAlbum.com saying "Whenever we receive a complaint, we are required by ICANN regulations to initiate an investigation as to whether the contact data displaying in the Whois database is valid data or not."[18] "On 12/19/2006 we sent a notice to you at the admin/tech contact email address and the account email address informing you of invalid data in breach of the domain registration agreement and advising you to update the information or risk cancellation of the domain. The contact information was not updated within the specified period of time and we canceled the domain," GoDaddy added.[18] The editor of "Domain Name Wire" said that since domain names are valuable, it was reasonable to expect that the registrar would try to contact the domain owner by phone or postal mail.[18] On February 28, 2007 GoDaddy offered to get the domain name back for the previous owner if he would indemnify GoDaddy from legal action by the new registrant.[19] GoDaddy stated that the new owner paid $18.99 for the domain, the price of a backorder, not a regular registration.[19]

On November 2, 2007, Domain Name Wire reported that it appears that GoDaddy no longer cancels domains for invalid whois.[20] The editor on Domain Name Wire received a message from a reader who is trying to acquire a domain with obviously false whois information.[20] The message from GoDaddy said "The domain has been suspended due to invalid Whois. The domain will remain in suspension through expiration, including the registry’s redemption period, unless the owner updates the contact information before that time."[20]

Shutdown of Chinese dissidents' sites

In 2007, several websites critical of the human rights abuses in People's Republic of China were shut down by Go Daddy, possibly under the pressure of the PRC government. Go Daddy denied any political involvement in the shutdown.[21][22]

Shutdown of RateMyCop.com

On March 11th, 2008, GoDaddy shut down RateMyCop.com — a Rate my professor type site where people would comment on their interactions with law enforcement officers — after complaints from police officers[23][24]. After being contacted about the shutdown, GoDaddy responded that it was due to "suspicious activity". However, the owner of the site was later told by GoDaddy that the site was shut down for reaching its 3 terabyte bandwidth limit, although doubt has been expressed about the second explanation as the site had only 80,000 connected users that day and 400,000 the previous day. In a similar incident, GoDaddy also cowered to a demand that the Irish website RateYourSolicitor.com be censored.[25]

"Fines"

GoDaddy frequently "fines" customers accused of spamming or other policy violations — without giving customers any recourse to dispute the allegations against them. When accused of a policy violation customers are given the option of paying a US$199 fine and staying with GoDaddy, paying a US$50 fine and immediately transferring to another web host & registrar, or having their domain names suspended and made nontransferable until they expire if they do not pay.[26][27]

Canceled IPO

On April 12, 2006, Marketwatch reported that Go Daddy Group Inc., had hired Lehman Brothers to manage an initial stock offering that could raise more than $100 million and value the company at several times that amount.[6] On May 12, 2006 Go Daddy filed an S-1 registration statement prior to an initial public offering.[28] On August 8, 2006 Bob Parsons, CEO of Go Daddy, announced that after some serious consideration, Go Daddy was not going to go public and that he had withdrawn the company's IPO filing.[29]

References

  1. ^ RegistrarStats
  2. ^ Berr, Jonathan (6/21/2006). "Go Daddy Gets Sued". TheStreet.com. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ Mills, Elinor (June 19, 2006). "Domain registrars in court". News.com.
  4. ^ Small, Robert L. (2005-09-24). "My Company Report on GoDaddy"". Retrieved 2007-01-14.
  5. ^ http://www.cbronline.com/article_news.asp?guid=7FB7324E-DB94-492A-8261-6745067459FC
  6. ^ "The 2005 Inc. 500 Profiles". Inc.com. Retrieved 2007-02-04.
  7. ^ Parsons, Bob (2007-03-30). "Our GoDaddy-esque marketing. Why I keep it edgy. Our 2nd GoDaddy-esque video cast". BobParsons.com. Retrieved 2007-04-10.
  8. ^ Elliot, Stuart (February 5, 2007). "Super Bowl Ads of Cartoonish Violence, Perhaps Reflecting Toll of War". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-02-07. Another Super Bowl, another cheesy commercial for GoDaddy, the Web site registrar operated by the GoDaddy Group. This time, there was a wild party in the office of the GoDaddy marketing department. "Everybody wants to work in marketing," a character says with a smirk. Hey, GoDaddy, go get Mommy — maybe she knows how to make a halfway decent Super Bowl spot. Agency: created internally.
  9. ^ Nimouse (pseudonym), Anna (February 6, 2007). "Not-So-Super Ads". The National Review. Retrieved 2007-02-07. The Go Daddy commercial that garnered enormous reaction (much negative) last year, with the buxom babe wearing a skimpy T-shirt with the logo across her chest, was tame in comparison to the raunchy, "Girls-Gone-Wild" style of this year's advertisement. The fact that the ad caused such a stir last year probably helped determine the content of this one.
  10. ^ Lippert, Barbara (February 05, 2007). "Barbara Lippert's Critique: The Morning After". Adweek. Retrieved 2007-02-07. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  11. ^ "Search Marketing Scorecard" (PDF). Reprise Media. Retrieved 2007-02-07.
  12. ^ "IAG Research Announces Top Super Bowl Ad" (Press release). IAG Research. February 7, 2007. Retrieved 2007-02-07.
  13. ^ "GoDaddy.com Donates $10K to Open Source Development Project" (Press release).
  14. ^ "Radio GoDaddy Rebranded to Life Online(TM) With Bob Parsons" (Press release).
  15. ^ http://www.alternet.org/story/47669/
  16. ^ McCullagh, Declan (January 25, 2007). "GoDaddy pulls security site after MySpace complaints". CNET's News.com.
  17. ^ Singel, Ryan (29 January 2007). "GoDaddy, Meet NoDaddy". Wired.com Blog 27B Stroke 6. Retrieved 2007-02-05. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  18. ^ a b c d Domain Name Wire. "GoDaddy Deletes Domain Name for Inaccurate Email Address." February 27, 2007.
  19. ^ a b Domain Name Wire. "GoDaddy Responds to Deletion Over Invalid Email Address." February 28, 2007.
  20. ^ a b c Domain Name Wire. "Has GoDaddy Done a 180 on Invalid Whois?" November 2, 2007.
  21. ^ Reporters sans frontières - United-States - China
  22. ^ 美国网路公司关闭中国异议网站 引发不满
  23. ^ http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/03/godaddy-silence.html
  24. ^ http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/03/12/1739228&from=rss
  25. ^ http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/09/16/1741242
  26. ^ http://www.slyck.com/story1053.html
  27. ^ http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/06/17/1319233
  28. ^ Go Daddy makes name for itself growing in Gilbert, going public
  29. ^ Hot Points – A blog by Go Daddy CEO and founder Bob Parsons

See also

External links