- Joined
- Apr 5, 2005
- Posts
- 9,726
- Reaction score
- 1,310
I was idly musing about this the other day and thought it was worth a post.
DomainLore works very well as a site (I'm certainly happy with the service, and I know many others are too) but it has a sting in the tail for those genuinely unable to distinguish "worthless" domains from domains that have the potential to sell for £50+.
There have been plenty of cases where I've seen domains get appraised as "worthless" (or a slightly kinder paraphrase) by experienced domain investors, only to wind up on DomainLore the very next day and (naturally) go unsold at the end of the auction period.
So what happens then?
Well, you've got a situation where somebody has spent...
- £5 (roughly) for a worthless domain
- £5 on a listing (because DL have a fantastic system whereby all successful sales are free, thus incentivising the listing of domains that will sell at realistic prices)
So suddenly that £5 gamble has turned into a £10 gamble.
So the seller now has to sell twice as many names to cover their costs, even before they can start to think about any sort of "profit".
Of course, the above is ludicrously trivial if we're talking about ONE domain - I assume anyone can carry a £10 rather than £5 loss. But scale it up to dozens/hundreds of domains or more, and it's another clear pointer that those who are newly entering the market have to be REALLY careful about what they register.
The beauty of Domainlore is that it gives names a real, fair chance at a sale because there are few listings at any one time (unlike Sedo/Afternic for example) and because the opportunity to buy is always time-limited. There are plenty of people watching the site, such that even names in the "hidden" section will sell if there's a flicker of interest. And of course a quick free thread in the Auction forum on Acorn will ensure the folks here see it.
But once Domainlore has been exhausted, the other avenues start to look like a lot of work or a big gamble:
- List on Sedo - have to catch a buyer's eye out of millions and millions of listings plus the sale price has to be over a minimum floor price to cover their minimum commission
- Afternic - ditto
- Point at a "for sale" page - need typein traffic as 0 visitors = 0 chances of making a sale
- Proactive marketing effort - research likely buyers, contact them and follow up (but if a domain is REALLY worth this kind of effort it would have already sold on DL for £50 at least)
DomainLore works very well as a site (I'm certainly happy with the service, and I know many others are too) but it has a sting in the tail for those genuinely unable to distinguish "worthless" domains from domains that have the potential to sell for £50+.
There have been plenty of cases where I've seen domains get appraised as "worthless" (or a slightly kinder paraphrase) by experienced domain investors, only to wind up on DomainLore the very next day and (naturally) go unsold at the end of the auction period.
So what happens then?
Well, you've got a situation where somebody has spent...
- £5 (roughly) for a worthless domain
- £5 on a listing (because DL have a fantastic system whereby all successful sales are free, thus incentivising the listing of domains that will sell at realistic prices)
So suddenly that £5 gamble has turned into a £10 gamble.
So the seller now has to sell twice as many names to cover their costs, even before they can start to think about any sort of "profit".
Of course, the above is ludicrously trivial if we're talking about ONE domain - I assume anyone can carry a £10 rather than £5 loss. But scale it up to dozens/hundreds of domains or more, and it's another clear pointer that those who are newly entering the market have to be REALLY careful about what they register.
The beauty of Domainlore is that it gives names a real, fair chance at a sale because there are few listings at any one time (unlike Sedo/Afternic for example) and because the opportunity to buy is always time-limited. There are plenty of people watching the site, such that even names in the "hidden" section will sell if there's a flicker of interest. And of course a quick free thread in the Auction forum on Acorn will ensure the folks here see it.
But once Domainlore has been exhausted, the other avenues start to look like a lot of work or a big gamble:
- List on Sedo - have to catch a buyer's eye out of millions and millions of listings plus the sale price has to be over a minimum floor price to cover their minimum commission
- Afternic - ditto
- Point at a "for sale" page - need typein traffic as 0 visitors = 0 chances of making a sale
- Proactive marketing effort - research likely buyers, contact them and follow up (but if a domain is REALLY worth this kind of effort it would have already sold on DL for £50 at least)
Last edited: