I was surprised at the great price Grit Brokerage got for HeyDay.co. The domain name sold for $45,000. A few weeks ago. The company that bought it just got featured in Forbes. From the article: A San Francisco-based company called Heyday has raised $175 million from General Catalyst, Khosla Ventures and other investors to buy, […]
Continue ReadingSchoolWebsite.com once sold for $30.8K by Frank Schilling left to expire
SchoolWebsite.com was picked up for $888 back in 2004 at Snapnames. The buyer was Frank Schilling. Frank held the name for 9 years and then sold it for $30,800 at Uniregistry. The buyer was a British company Founded by Daniel Clarke in 2004. Crunchbase description: School Website is the UK’s leading provider of websites to […]
Continue ReadingTop.Domains records second highest reported .link sale
Go.Link becomes the second highest reported .link sale of all time. Selling for $26,000. Top.Domains was the seller and they picked the name up back in 2017. App.link is the highest reported .link sale. The buyer looks to be an organization named Adjust. A lot of the whois info is obscured. The domain name moved […]
Continue Reading$29,888 buyer of Fantaseek.com revealed
Mike Mann sold Fantaseek.com for $29,888 last month and now there is a website up but it looks a little incomplete. Mike got a great price, this is the kind of brandable that a brandable boutique would price in the $2,000 – $3,000 range. Real fantasy adventures, thus the play on seeking fantasy with Fantaseek. […]
Continue ReadingA.I. and voice recognition and their impact on Startup naming trends
Startup naming trends – a return to literal and proper spelling? Stephen Moore over at Marker wrote an interesting article on a return to proper spelling in the world of startups. He goes into the practice of disemvoweling and how it became a thing in the previous decade. He writes: In 2010, Flickr co-founder Caterina […]
Continue ReadingMoney down the drain on StreamCast.com, FXSC.com and more
Looking at some drops over the last couple days you see a lot of wasted money down the drain. StreamCast.com was actually dropped in 2014 after being a personal website for a gentleman involved in tech. Back then it closed at $6,553. You won’t find it on Namebio because it did not cover DropCatch until […]
Continue ReadingQRapp.com purchased for $10,000 last month now live
QRapp.com was purchased for $10,000 last month on Sedo. QRapp.com was sold on NameJet for $501 in 2016, the 4 year hold paid off for the domainer who bought it with a $10,000 sale. The domain name is now up and running with a live website. The buyer Zygomatic is an online publisher out of […]
Continue ReadingPricing Domain Names – Opinions vary
Pricing your domain names. It’s a topic that can stir up debate, confusion, even fear. Yes fear, the fear of missing out (FOMO) on the big sale. Domain investors tend to take a look around at what others are doing. It makes sense to get a broad sense of what your peers are doing. But […]
Continue ReadingYou need to do a lot more than just glance at the sales data
New domain name investors often are given the advice, “Check the sales data to learn about what’s a good domain name.” A cursory glance of the sales data provided by Namebio or DNJournal can leave one confused or hastily registering bad domain names. You need to go much deeper into the data. If you are […]
Continue ReadingOutbound = Spamming (Really???)
It seems like some domain investors continue to see outbound marketing as spam. Whenever the topic comes up on Namepros the comments fly. A recent thread on automating outbound got replies like: Another outbound thread?Outbout=spamming.How many outbound threads do you need? Outbound marketing needs to be done properly, making sure it does not violate the […]
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