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800 members

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That's pretty cool!

I have to say - and this is strictly without singling out any particular person - that the average quality of names being posted for sale/appraisal continues to drop, and I can't help thinking there's a correlation.
 
Well done - this is a really professionally run board. Keep up the good work.

Stephen.
 
Edwin said:
That's pretty cool!

I have to say - and this is strictly without singling out any particular person - that the average quality of names being posted for sale/appraisal continues to drop, and I can't help thinking there's a correlation.

Not everyone can hold quality generic term domains, we all start from somewhere...some people go about things differently, people who want to get into domains and start 2005 without deep pockets will always struggle and have to work much harder to get far.

How would you start out again tommorow with let's say £500 in your back pocket and without the contacts and knowledge you've gained over years?

There is far too much elitism in domaining, I don't think belittleing people because their domains aren't upto scratch with your own standards is the way to go.

Not a dig at you personally, just at the industry as a whole be it this or any forum/chat room...after all, one mans rubbish is another mans treasure ;) :)

Congratulations on 800 members!, long may it continue.
 
J2theIZZO said:
How would you start out again tommorow with let's say £500 in your back pocket and without the contacts and knowledge you've gained over years?

I don't think I would, frankly. If all I had was £500 and I knew nothing about the domain name industry except a vague idea that "some people make a lot of money in it" then it would seem far too risky/outlandish a proposition. Either that, or I would spend weeks or months reading everything I could first until I felt I understood at least basically what I was doing.

Many names posted recently would never have been registered if their owners had bothered to learn those "basics". Harsh, but real life doesn't give points for "trying", only for success!

If all you have to play with is £500, you'd better be 99% sure you're going to learn the trade within the boundaries of that resource, or else all you've done is throw away your very limited capital. If you make £500-worth of mistakes it's game over.
 
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I think the point is, that if someone posts up for the community to appraise "1website-d0main.wp" then i'll always say it how it is. I feel like replying to people who post these... and saying what are you thinking? And... After all really this is a UK forum not Western Outermongolia.

BUT, those selling domains, well fair dos. If you don't sell them, please don't keep posting them up, its a bit annyoing to those who read each post here.

Good luck to those starting out, read and learn - it'll save you your £500 in the first place!!
 
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J2theIZZO said:
Not everyone can hold quality generic term domains, we all start from somewhere...some people go about things differently, people who want to get into domains and start 2005 without deep pockets will always struggle and have to work much harder to get far.

But why are some people even starting in domains? It seems some have a clear plan, have done their homework and burst onto the scene with a reasonably good start - and good luck to them! Others just want the cyber-equivalent of a winning lottery ticket and make elementary mistakes that people (including me) have been warning against for nearly a decade.

Again, this is real life, not Hollywood. And in real life, people fail - usually many people for every one person that succeeds. There's no magic silver bullet to success in the domain name world (though having spare cash can help, of course, and luck plays a part) and many people on here have paid their dues in terms of thousands of hours spent "learning the trade" so it's pure fantasy to think one can break into the industry without any effort or willingness to do research. You wouldn't expect to become a successful brain surgeon on 30 minutes work - so why should domaining be seen as an "easy ride"?

Probably 90% of the people now "in domains" (if defined as "owning domains registered with the specific intent to make money") have no business being there, since pragmatically they lack the patience/resolve/resources to take their interest to the next level and learn what it takes to begin to see some success. The other 10% have my full respect and I wish them well.

My worry is that, while the above is blunt, it may be that not enough people are blunt enough and that a lot of folks will go on setting their money on fire on their virtual front lawn...

There is far too much elitism in domaining, I don't think belittleing people because their domains aren't upto scratch with your own standards is the way to go.

Not a dig at you personally, just at the industry as a whole be it this or any forum/chat room...after all, one mans rubbish is another mans treasure

Well, somebody has to point out that in most cases the Emperor really has no clothes. Usually, one man's rubbish is in fact also another man's rubbish, that's the way things work. Those that "get it", on the other hand, aren't registering "rubbish".

I see things very differently - the sheer patience and willingness to help evidenced on here and on other domain forums astonishes me at times, when people are confronted by the thousandth newbie making exactly the same mistakes again and again.

There is a real sense of despair - even desperation - in many of the posts on domain forums, with the posters seemingly needing to sell their domains to pay bills, to buy more domains, to pay off XYZ loan and so on. Involvement to that extent is scary!
 
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Websites, on the other hand, are MUCH more forgiving than domains! One domain (redirected to a free hosting site at first, if needed) is all you need to start building a "real" website, and you can experiment and take your time learning the craft at little or no additional cost and perhaps even make a bit of money early on with the help of Adsense and similar, which help monetize even small amounts of traffic.

Spend years learning the domain trade, and you're talking about hundreds or thousands of pounds potentially down the drain (unless you do all the learning up front). But spend years learning to build and promote websites, and there's no "cost meter" ticking over, except of course for the opportunity cost of the time put in.

If I was literally starting with a blank slate in 2005, I'd choose websites over domains every single time.
 
I joined this site, not as a 'Domainer' but I just find this area of business interesting. I do have a couple of domains (12 in total and are worthless), purely for personal projects and email address's, nowhere near the number some of the members here have.

Hopefully the posts I do make are of interest and relevent to this forum. I sometimes look at the appraisal threads and hesitate to post, but stop, questioning my right to comment on something I really dont believe I have the knowledge to comment.

However for somebody like me, that has allways had a interest in technology and progress, this is a good and well run forum and I enjoy popping in here during the day.
 
meinthecorner said:
I joined this site, not as a 'Domainer' but I just find this area of business interesting. I do have a couple of domains (12 in total and are worthless), purely for personal projects and email address's, nowhere near the number some of the members here have.

And that's very healthy! Interest is great... and can stimulate the best discussions.
 
I agree with you, people do enter this thinking they can make a living because domainx.net recently sold for £xx,xxx.

People automaticly assume that they can enter the market, register some absurd vaugely simlar domain, come on a board and automaticly sell the domain to a reseller for a simlar figure. 90% of those people will spend their £500 and walk away never to return.

My point about starting in 2005 and working harder applys to the 10% I guess.

I myself started in domaining with $8, I turned that $8 into $30 and so on, within the first 3 months i'd turned that $8 into over $3000. It can be fustrating at times watching people make the same mistakes over and over but this will never change.

Myself, i'm considering going into hiding and just getting on with it ;-)
 
I've got domainx.co.uk haha but I see your point.

I read these forums whenever I can, even made a few small donations, I had a shed load of domains for development anyway so it seemed natural to try and lose some for cash if possible for ideas that are dead. Affiliate Marketing and domain buying go hand in hand unless you concentrate on one or two projects.

But as you learn simple things like that of existing traffic with extension, if you can pay for the domain in a month to a year via parking or affiliate marketing and even after that also sell it on at the end then you're a winner, you narrow the resources you use, keywords are natural for seo and therefore domain buying as well. The domains I list may or may not conjure up any interest but that's my learning curve.

I do look at other sites advertising domains and domain sales and try and gauge which way I should be heading but this isn't my first love, if I see something I'll buy it but I won't go out and buy 200 odd at month's end. You have to know when to stop and also do your research on every one and whether that new tech name really is worth £6. Something I can't confess to doing as often as I should over the past 60 days.

However when I see other people stating their domain names, I think myself lucky. Everyone sees good in different things, it's why handsome men like me get to date extremly good looking women...

I'd love to hear from anybody via PM as to whether half the domains I have that are listed are rubbish or just plain crap but at the time of purchase I felt they may gain a little interest in amongst a four year span. Alternatively give me confidence and makeoffers :D

And yes a good set of forums, it's not easy running a community. I've had one of mine for several years and I run hot and cold with it.
 
J2theIZZO said:
Not everyone can hold quality generic term domains, we all start from somewhere...some people go about things differently, people who want to get into domains and start 2005 without deep pockets will always struggle and have to work much harder to get far.

How would you start out again tommorow with let's say £500 in your back pocket and without the contacts and knowledge you've gained over years?

There is far too much elitism in domaining, I don't think belittleing people because their domains aren't upto scratch with your own standards is the way to go.

Not a dig at you personally, just at the industry as a whole be it this or any forum/chat room...after all, one mans rubbish is another mans treasure.

I totally agree, although Edwin is right in that the best way to make money now is in starting websites, building them up and then selling them.
 
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Count me in as one of those pleased to see the growth. Congrats to admin for all the hard work and everyone else involved in this forum. Hopefully sometime soon Sedo's post numbers will look like J2theIZZO's :).

Here's to getting 8000 members...

Best,

Jakob
 
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I meant to getting 8000 members sometime in the near future ;)
 
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