Welcome Ditlev, and congratulations on acquiring such a large and diverse portfolio of domain names.
It would be easy to spend days, or weeks, brainstorming potential opportunities to exploit even a fraction of your names. A lot will depend on how much time you have to devote to the names, or to pay someone to do so for you. A quick Google immediately shows that you have significant experience and involvement in technology businesses generally.
From a quick browse on Sedo, three slightly negative aspects stand out to me about your portfolio alongside the overall superb collection of premium, brandable terms, so I hope you will forgive me for flagging them up :
- very few of the names are natural generic terms for products etc that people type in; instead, they are mainy catchy phrases that could be applied to loosely-related industries ... with some effort
- there are lots of hyphenated domain names, which can rank well in search engines but fail the classic "radio" test for getting the average man-in-the-street to remember them and type them in later
- there are a surprising number of names that seem to be sailing close to the wind with trademarks, copyright or intellectual property : the danger here is if you go for the easy approach of parking your whole portfolio, you may accidentally hit problems when context-sensitive advertising with things like Google Adsense kick in, so maybe do some pruning before you take that approach
So, you clearly have a wonderful portfolio ... but almost too large and brilliant a portfolio, and it may well be worth categorising and prioritising the names into a few clusters to make the portfolio more manageable.
I hope you enjoy your time here : Acorn spans a wide range of sizes and qualities of domain name portfolios, but a lot of the underlying advice and shared experiences are valuable and relevant for players all the way along the spectrum.
Best wishes,
David Collison, Weald Domains