Shane
Top Contributor
Consumers will deal with the change okay.
Remember websites used to always be advertised with the http:// at the front? These days most advertisers don't even bother with the www. In fact many advertisers don't bother with the domain at all, and just say "search example".
Going back years ago I remember telling people to check out a website and I'd say "go to example.com.au" and they'd say " do I need to put the http thing in?"
Obviously the change in removing the .com is completely different from a technical perspective, but for most consumers who have zero care about how a URL is structured, ditching the .com shouldn't pose too much of an issue.
Furthermore, even now when I'm showing my staff something on the computer and tell them to go to our website, they will always search our business name in Google rather than typing in the domain. That makes the com.au / .au argument somewhat irrelevant for many...
Remember websites used to always be advertised with the http:// at the front? These days most advertisers don't even bother with the www. In fact many advertisers don't bother with the domain at all, and just say "search example".
Going back years ago I remember telling people to check out a website and I'd say "go to example.com.au" and they'd say " do I need to put the http thing in?"
Obviously the change in removing the .com is completely different from a technical perspective, but for most consumers who have zero care about how a URL is structured, ditching the .com shouldn't pose too much of an issue.
Furthermore, even now when I'm showing my staff something on the computer and tell them to go to our website, they will always search our business name in Google rather than typing in the domain. That makes the com.au / .au argument somewhat irrelevant for many...