Finding Personal Name Domain Names

Wednesday, January 17, 2007 at 1:49 pm By: Mark

First and last names are good domain name investments. Think about it, have you ever looked up your name to see if it was available? Of course, you have. But, the most popular names are taken. However, the ones past the top 1000 or lower rankings, particularly last names, are still valuable. While #1 ranked Smith is the name for about 2,500,000 million people, there are still about 5,000 Hambrick’s ranked 5,003, for example. That’s a lot of potential buyers for any of the major TLD’s.

So where do you find these lists? There are a lot of sites on the web that show the data, but at the core they mostly use the 1990 US Census Data found on this page. From this page you can enter the actual file of last, and both male and female first names. The lists are shown in ranking order, along with the frequency and ranking. In addition, you can search for a name to bring up the data for the name.

Numerous sites parse and display these data in various formats. Just search for them. One nice example is this page at Mongabay.com.

Let me know in the comments any other nice name sites.

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Think out of the Domain Name Box

Thursday, December 14, 2006 at 12:26 pm By: Mark

You know, I often watch with amusement how domainers all follow the same old formula. Overture! Number of web pages! Pagerank! Sure, all that is very important, extremely important. But, that’s not all there is. You have to think differently too. In investing, anyone who does what everyone else does will end up getting clobbered in the end (watch those overpaying on snapnames in a few years).

I look at early trends, future technologies and often buy names that have none of the traditional metrics. I can get them cheap. Hell, sometimes I am able to hand-reg a name and resell it relatively quickly for a large profit.

Here’s a case in point that just happened today: I know that Virtual Worlds, in which people actually work and play, are going to be huge. Look at SecondLife already. Lots of entrepreneurial activity going on there. So, back in July I thought up the word Virtualpreneur. I may have not been the first to think it up, but I was ready to be the first to act on it.

But it had zero OVT, was not a real word and Google Search shows exactly 25 pages that have the term on it. The tlds were available (although now I see that the .biz version is taken and I cannot remember if it was back then or not). All metrics that would steer a traditional domain name investor away from the name were in place. Well, I registered Virtualpreneur.com at for $7 at GoDaddy anyway, on the basis of my perception of the future.

Today, I got an offer for a few hundred dollars on it. I countered with $750 and the buyer immediately took it. I actually should have gone for more. But, that’s over 100 times my money in less than half a year.

I’ve done this before. It’s called thinking, not following.

So, being the virtualpreneur that I am, I immediately went and bought the remaining good TLD’s for the name. :)

Think. Lead. Don’t follow.

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Overture Keyword Selector Tool Alternatives

Friday, November 17, 2006 at 11:28 am By: Mark

Anyone else getting frustrated trying to use the Overture Keyword Selector Tool becaase 9 out of 10 times it just won’t load? I’ve been searching for alternatives and would like to hear what else you’ve found that works well — and is free.

Jennifer over at Speculator.cc just gave me a great alternative. It’s another Keyword suggestion Tool at GlobalPromoter.com. So far, it seems to work every time and gives the same results as the other one.

I’d like to hear what else everyone is using. Please post the links in the comments. Thanks!

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Name Drop Auctions Going Bonkers

Friday, April 28, 2006 at 9:41 am By: Mark

I’ve picked up my share of names from drop sites like Snapnames.com, Pool.com and enom.com. I’ve snagged names for as little as $60, and have been in auctions bidding into the tens of thousands of dollars.

There are a handful of well-known bidders that, in my opinion, very often overbid for names. Some of these domain names—a few—are worth the prices paid, but most of them in my judgment are not. It seems the bidding is not based not upon a realistic value for the name, but upon the size of the ego of the bidder or the emotion of the moment.

I’ll hang in on an auction to the point where I hit a predetermined fair value for the name. When I get to that point, I’ll pull out. When I do, I always picture the other bidder smiling that he’s beat the poor slob who he thinks is out of his league. And that makes me smile, because I believe I have won by not overpaying for the risk-reward I’ve calculated. (I have to admit that sometime I continue to bid beyond what I feel the name is worth just to make the other party pay more because I know their ego will not let them be outbid by me.)

I really believe that if many of the same names were for sale by owner, and not at auction, that these bidders would never pay the prices they are paying at auction, where emotion and the ego drives the bids up. That’s not the way to buy names.

Paying such high prices for some of these names is taking the easy way out. While I too have the funds to do the same thing day after day if I desired, it doesn’t require any ingenuity or talent to just outbid people to outbid them. While I certainly do take advantage of buying drop names at auctions myself, I prefer to find available new and just-dropped names, or pay existing name owners a few hundred dollars or less for great names when I can get away with it. In general, much better deals can be had by buying names from the buyer, than by going to drop auctions when the overbidders are involved.

But wait! People say all the good names are gone, right? Isn’t that what the “experts” say? Not true. Sure, all the extremely valuable names are gone, but I constantly pick up valuable names for as low as reg fee to up to a few hundred dollars. And I sell these names for anywhere from $500 to many thousands of dollars. That’s a risk-reward scenario I like. And I do it over and over. For example, the last ten names I sold grossed $8,400. What did I pay for them? A total of $205. It can be done.

How am I able to do this? Well, I read a lot about new trends, science and keep up with the news. And I have a variety of tools I use that I doubt many people avail themselves of. And, I spend time digging. Sure, I’ve wasted my money on many of the names I bought in the first few months of doing this when I started out last year. But, we’re talking about just a few thousand dollars for lessons learned, and my selection ability has vastly improved.

I am primarily an investor of stocks, commodities, real estate and business private placements. Domain investing “feels” like a whole different game, but it’s really not. You must make wise investment decisions, while minimizing risk. And there is risk out there. Aside from unanticipated changes to the way domain names and search engines work, you’ve got natural boom-bust cycles in industry (anyone remember the tech boom/bust? I certainly do), macro economy risk brought upon us by a real estate bust, global recession/depression, or geopolitical events. It could be anything. I know I would not want to be holding millions of dollars of overpriced, speculative domain names if anything goes awry. I cannot protect my domain portfolio against losses like I can with stocks and commodities by purchasing shorts and puts.

The next time you are in an auction against bidders gone wild, remember this: the winners of drop name auctions are not always the highest bidders, but the smartest bidders.

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What a Brainstorming Tool — and Free!

Friday, January 6, 2006 at 5:06 pm By: Mark

Two days ago I mentioned the three free domain software tools from from Softnik.com. At that point I had only tried Domain Name Filter. Since then, I have been using Domain Name Analyzer quite a bit. I can tell you that I am blown away with this free program as well. Even more so!

Domain Name Analyzer is a brainstorming tool that will help you to come up with new domain names to purchase. There are a lot of things you can use this for, but let me tell you how I have been using it

I’m not going to tell you exactly what I used it for since many of you are competing for the same names I am. But, follow my hypothetical example. Let’s say that you think that the word “Tasty” followed by a food name (Like TastyTomato.com) would be a great name to own. You could just grab a list of foods and go to Whois and try keying all the combinations to see which are available. But, that’s a lot of work. Instead, what you can do with this product is go online and find a list of foods that you can copy into a text file. Then, start up Domain Name Analyzer and import the file (or cut and paste the words) into the “Construct Names” function. Tell it you want to try “Tasty” in front of every food, and which TLDs you are interested in. It will instantaneously create a list of Tasty[food].TLD names and place them in a window. You then tell the program to check which are available. When completed (very quickly), you can export the available names to a file for your use. Voila! Instant names!

I had a great idea for this yesterday and it generated hundreds of names of which I ended up registering around the best 50-60!

There a multitude of ways to use this fantastic tool, but it’s easier if you just download it and give it a try, than it is to explain it all to you.

Next, I’m getting into the a Domain Name Status Reporter. I gave it a quick test run and it looks like another very useful program.

No, I’m not getting any payment from Softnik. They don’t even know I’m pumping them.

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Three Free Domain Software Products

Wednesday, January 4, 2006 at 10:44 am By: Mark

I subscribed to Exody.com to get raw name files. The lists are huge and it is not the easiest thing to comb through the names. I don’t know about everyone else, but I cannot look at every name so I search for keywords I am interested in. I found a free tool that is helpful in this task, and that led me to two other free tools.

While I was at the Softnik.com site to download a trial of Watch My Domains Professional, I saw that they offer a free program called Domain Name Filter. With this program I can import any size text file of domain names and filter them based on various criteria. It doesn’t do everything I need, but considering it’s free, it’s very helpful.

While there, I noticed that there are two other free programs: Domain Name Status Reporter lets you monitor the status of a set of domain names. Domain Name Analyzer is a powerful brainstorming tool for finding domain names.

The entire series of their domain-related programs can be found on their Domain0Punch.com site.

P.S. Speaking of Exody.com files, those that use it know that there is no help. Trying to figure out which files are what is a nightmare. If someone is willing to help me out with some explanation, could you contact me so I can ask you a couple questions?

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3-character Price Guide

Saturday, December 17, 2005 at 10:08 am By: Mark

If you are interested in 3-character domains, 3Character.com provides an up-to-date price guide and a recent sales report, in addition to a forum.

The price guide includes separate wholsale pricing for 3-letter names, 3-number names and 3-character (mixed) names. check it out.

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New! DomainsBotLabs Offer Massive Statistical Data and Brainstorming Tools

Tuesday, December 6, 2005 at 2:21 pm By: Mark

DomainsBot.com, a very nice domain name brainstorming site I previously wrote about, has some intriguing new applications they’ve put together and placed in their new DomansBotLabs section. They will provide you with considerable statistics and tools to help you better design your name selection criteria. The site is wonderfully designed for your immediate understanding of how to proceed, the data is laid out clearly and the tools are simple to use.

Word Trends
Type in a keyword and you will get a graph showing the domains registered (within the major TLDs ) over time that contain that keyword. You can select additional keywords to include in the graph to view their relative popularity. For example, entering Coke and Pepsi shows two trend lines with similar growth rates, but the number of Coke names registered is nearly twice that of Pepsi.

Domain Stats
This page shows a series of statistical data, graphs, trendlines and conclusions regarding the value of domain names given various aspects of the name. Reports include number of domains sold and values of domains sold by length, number of keywords; and parts of speech. There are 38 figures in all! Really, there is a lot of valuable data here.

Search Cloud
This cool tool provides a dynamic “visual cloud” that suggests new available domain names based on relationships between keywords in existing domain names. It’s difficult to really describe how the results are displayed, so just try it out.

Split-it
As readers of this blog know from reading our wildly popular Hilarious Domain Name Mispronouncings article, there can sometimes be an unintentional double meaning for a domain name if keywords are split in different ways. For a famous example, ExpertsExchange.com also reads ExpertSexChange.com. Use Split-it to avoid these embarrassing and costly mishaps. As you type the word, the Visual Splitter will show you the various possibilities and tell you which is likeliest.

There is also another application called Shadow. It’s not a tool, but a small piece of software that you download on to your computer that will work in a distributed computing fashion to help DomainsBot crunch the massive data in order to better provide more free statistical reporting to you. It works similarly to the Berkeley University’s Seti program, if you are familiar with that. Shadow is not something in which you have to participate to get their reports.

It’s apparent a lot of work went into the DomainsBotLabs project and the quality of their work and the sheer volume of data reflect that. My hat is off to these guys and look forward to see what further tools and information they will bring to us in the future.

internet, domain, domain name

Favorite Buys from Last Week

Monday, December 5, 2005 at 9:06 am By: Mark

Here are my favorite buys from last week. You can see all of the names on my Latest Buys page. I’m particularly excited that I was able to purchase RoboHuman.com for just $10 (no other bidders) on tdnam.com. With the advent of Robo-everything now being sold or developed (witness hot-selling RoboSapien and RoboRaptor in stores now), I was shocked a name like RoboHuman was so easy to get; a product of this name will surely be developed some day. If not, all of us will be eventually part robot anyway so this name terrific. If you think I’m out of my mind, read The Singularity is Near, by Ray Kurzweil.

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Favorite Buys from Last Week

Monday, November 28, 2005 at 1:35 pm By: Mark

These are my favorites of the names I purchased last week:

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