Huge profits in (the right) Cheap Names

Saturday, February 24, 2007 at 1:22 pm By: Mark

Do you have to pay a big bucks for names to make big profits on them? No. Are the only good names already taken and do you have to bid them up at dropcatchers to get them? No. Decent names abound at low prices and can even still be hand registered.

To illustrate, in the last week, I sold seven names. All were purchased in the last year. Three were hand registered and four were picked up at tdnam for $5 to $15 dollars, plus registration fee. What did I gross on those names? $5,240.

That’s $92 turned into $5,240, less Sedo or escrow.com fees.

And, I didn’t have much risk with these names as they were so inexpensive. Don’t get me wrong, I do buy more expensive names as well, having paid up to a several thousand dollars for a name. And I’d certainly be willing to pay $50,000 - $100,000 or more for a truly great name. But, when names get into that price range, they are invariably on a major dropcatcher’s site and there are tool many fools there spending their money like it’s 1999 in the tech bubble stock market again. No way I’m going to hang on to millions of dollars of names in a market that could bust (or change) when you least expect it. And we could likely be going into a housing led recession by next year and that will effect all investment markets…but I digress. Am I missing out on making the million dollar hit? Of course. But I do that in other business ventures, not this little hobby.

There are many thousands of dollars to be made by thinking differently, not chasing keywords everyone is chasing, being well-read and opportunistic, being a good negotiator, and most of all using your intuition — if you have it.

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TDNAM Bargains Galore!!

Tuesday, February 20, 2007 at 9:52 am By: Mark

I saw all these bargains listed at tdnam.com for $500,000 or more. You better run to buy them before someone else does! LOL! And these are Buy Now prices.

What are these idiots thinking?

tipsurf.com $7,000,000
showtv.net $5,000,000
indianrailway.com $5,000,000
gogal.com $5,000,000
soulseek.com $4,550,000
manateeonline.com $4,000,000
spigots.com $3,500,000
autoexpressusa.com $3,250,000
rctv.com $3,000,000
fantasmas.com $2,500,000
tvmix.com $2,225,225
halfmoon.org $980,000
zdos.com $955,000
callcash.com $763,000
liquid2k.com $753,000
desktopdollars.com $720,000
jawa.com $700,000
freedomtax.com $690,000
cdcovercentral.com $637,000
cokozel.com $607,000
bitreactor.com $600,000
malhumor.com $580,000
alsalafyoon.com $570,000
rcsi.com $560,000
elitegroup.com $550,000
allvids.com $543,000
vectorlounge.com $540,000
unitedmobile.com $540,000
spyoptics.com $537,000
bilal.com $520,000
chatpinguino.com $500,000

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Domain Name Sales Databases

Tuesday, February 13, 2007 at 3:36 pm By: Mark

When you go to buy or sell a name, it’s important to know how much similar names have sold for. Good appraisals take these comps into consideration, but you can do this legwork yourself with two great websites that catalog domain sales data and put it all in an easily searchable database. The two sites are DNSalePrice.com and NameBio.com.

Both of them do pretty similar things, letting you select and sort on things like keyword, TLD, date and price. There are some differences, but the main functionality is pretty much the same. But, the little differences will steer you to one or the other as your primary program. For example, I prefer the interface of NameBio.com, the many extra options and the average price display for your selections. But, I found that both sites did not include some sales that the other sites included.
NameBio.com only receives sales feeds from verified sources like domain auction houses and brokers, not forums and unverified private sales, to insure accuracy. This is good to know, but a lot of business goes on privately and in forums, so you might still find the extra sales in DNSalePrice.com useful–just keep in mind some may or may not be accurate. I do know that several of my private sales showed up on DNSalePrice.com and the price was accurate. Regardless, it’s best to check both sites if you are doing serious research.

Here is an example of the differences, when looking up .cc sales for the last 6 months:

NameBio.com

RingTones.cc….5,000
Pool.cc….2,006
Flx.cc….1,000
Attorney.cc….1,000

DNSalePrices.com

Software.cc….12,500
Cash.cc….5,500
Fund.cc….4,000
Program….2,500
Lease.cc….2,500
Pool.cc….2,006
Ad.cc….1,750 (my purchase, accurate)
Bet.cc….1,500
Flex.cc….1,200
Attorney.cc….1,000 (my purchase, accurate)
Robotics.cc….1,000 (my purchase, accurate)
Tofu.cc….1,000 (my sale, accurate)

So, next time you think about spending $20-50 for a professional appraisal, try these sites first. They can provide valuable insight, providing you with negotiating ammo for whether you are buying or selling.

Fewer .CC Domain Names Dropping

Sunday, January 21, 2007 at 10:20 pm By: Mark

As some of you know, I invest in .CC names. You can see my portfolio of 600 .CC domain names at Speculator.cc.

I noticed something very interesting tonight as I was at the computer with a glass of Grand Mariner, leisurely checking the status of what I thought would be upcoming Pending-Delete .CC names, so I can snatch them up. I have a list of over 30,000 registered .cc names that I have put together through various means. Periodically, I run this list through a program that updates the recently expired names from the list to see what is going to delete and what has been renewed. It seemed that it was only months ago that a very large number of the names would go unrenewed by their owners. But tonight I was shocked as I went through perhaps 1500 names that had expired in the last couple weeks. Only about a dozen were not renewed! And not all names are the cream of the crop either, although these are the better names that are registered.

I can only draw the conclusion that .CC name owners are becoming more aware of the rising value of these names. It’s a good thing I’ve got 600 of them already. :)

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Godaddy Appraisal says bizjobs.cc worth up to $34,216!

Tuesday, January 9, 2007 at 9:34 am By: Mark

If you want to see how ridiculous the GoDaddy appraisals are, look no further than this example: bizjobs.cc, listed at tdnam.

Godaddy’s Certified Domain Appraisal give it a price range of $13,160.00 - $34,216.00. I see no website for the name, no traffic listed, the name itself is stupid and it’s a .cc tld (growing, but still a lower priced tld). Unbelievable.

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Updated Domain Sales: 3rd Quarter Afternic Sales

Monday, October 9, 2006 at 9:58 am By: Mark

I’ve just updated the Domains Sales page with the list of domain names sold through Afternic for the 3rd Quarter of of 2006. Take look.

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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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Free Online Name Self-Appraisal

Friday, January 13, 2006 at 7:57 am By: Mark

There’s nothing like a human appraisal. But some of the lowest priced ones do no more than run the name through some metrics for a quick number. I’ve discovered a free site named SwiftAppraisal.com, that will give you a quick number. It bases the value on eleven factors: Marketability, Clarity, Memorability, Popularity, Extension, Length, Words, Hyphens, Numerals, Substitutions, and Abbreviations. Of course, it relies on you being honest with yourself when answering the questions.

Are the calculated values accurate? Are they even close? Or, are they just for fun? Well, I don’t know, I haven’t used it enough to know. I did try it with one name for whch I already have an Afternic $19.95 appraisal. The domain name is BusinessSolar.com. SwiftAppraisalcom estimated the value at $5,600 - $8,400. My Afternic Appraisal is $1,400 - $6,100. (All solar names went up in value lately though, with this story.) I first had a value double this, but I had specified the market as a “medium market;” this time I said “small market.” Not sure what I’d really consider it–it might be best described as medium.

Why don’t you all give it a try on some of your names and post the result in the comments below.

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The State of the Domain Industry

Wednesday, January 11, 2006 at 2:13 pm By: Mark

If you haven’t read it yet, read DNJournal’s article on the State of the Domain Industry. It’s a great article and a critical read for any domain investor.

The introduction of the article:

In our first State of the Industry survey of domain business experts a year ago, our panel predicted a phenomenal year in 2005. Their global forecast for the industry was right on the money as were many of their predictions regarding specific issues and events. Considering their track record we have been chomping at the bit to round up the channel’s best and brightest once again to get their insight into the events and trends of 2005 and more importantly, what they expect for the New Year ahead.

You will hear from a blue ribbon group of 20 experts that include key executives from the leading companies in the registration, PPC, aftermarket sales, drop catching and domain development sectors, as well as leading industry attorneys, trade show organizers and the people whose broad shoulders carry those mentioned above - domain name owners.

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View Afternic Sales for Last Three Years

Monday, January 9, 2006 at 12:14 pm By: Mark

Want to see the sales made through Afternic.com for the last few years? Go to this page on ThatSoftwareGuy.com. They’ve somehow pulled together the data for years 2003 through 2006. The HTML pages show the data in date order, but all but the current year can be downloaded in Excel format which you can sort by dollar amount on your computer.

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