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Guard Your Domain Name
Steve Dennie, Communications Director
A domain name is a very cheap piece of cyber real estate. Your church can register a domain for $20 or less per year. This domain can then become the hub for all of your church's internet communications--your website, your email, a blog, etc. If people know your domain name, they can find you.

However, every year, one or two United Brethren churches lose their domain name.
  • Maybe nobody in the church office understood what the renewal notices were about. 
  • Maybe renewal notices were going to somebody who no longer attends, but who originally registered the account. 
  • Maybe they just procrastinated too long. 
  • Or maybe they just forgot. 
Many companies eagerly pounce on lapsed domain names. They like snapping up something with established traffic flow. As a result, the church loses their domain name, which has a variety of ramifications: 
  • The church website address no longer works. 
  • Email addresses which used that domain no longer work. 
  • Business cards, letterhead, and any other printed materials which mentioned those email addresses or the website URL must be reprinted. 
  • The church must find a new domain name, which will probably be less satisfactory than the previous one. 
  • People who type in the name of the previous domain name will be taken to something totally unrelated to the church--perhaps a porn site. 
So, some suggestions:
  1. Make sure you know where the domain is registered.
  2. Try to get the domain directly under the church's control, rather than in the account of a parishioner. 
  3. Make sure your contact information with the registrar is current, so you receive notices when it's about to expire.

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