NamePros
Welcome, Guest! Ready to make a name for yourself in the domain business? We welcome both the hobbyist and professional domainer to join the discussion as part of the NamePros community.

Click here to create your profile to start earning reputation for posting, and trader ratings for buying & selling in our free e-marketplace. Build your trader rating with each successful sale. Our system has tracked over 100,000 sales and counting!
FAQ & TOS Register Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Go Back   NamePros.com > Domain Name Discussion Forums > Domain Names > Domain Newbies
Reload this Page How to evaluate what to privately offer on a domain

Domain Newbies New to domain names? Have your questions answered here.

Advanced Search


Closed Thread
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 06-12-2008, 07:53 AM THREAD STARTER               #1 (permalink)
New Member
 
workingclassdog's Avatar
Join Date: May 2008
Location: NJ
Posts: 21
workingclassdog is an unknown quantity at this point
 



How to evaluate what to privately offer on a domain


Hi everyone...

I have a domain that I'd really like to get for personal use, the end user is not a domainer and is willing to take an offer privately on the set (.com/.net). He had mentioned that he hadn't planned on selling because he thought it would make a good blog name as well - but he's willing to entertain a fair offer. (I'm not mentioning it to avoid any competition hehe)
????: NamePros.com http://www.namepros.com/domain-newbies/480869-how-evaluate-what-privately-offer-domain.html

My question is - what's the best approach for determining a fair offer? Is Estibot reliable in cases like this... or is there a better method for evaluating what a fair price would be?

The name doesn't really have brand-ability or a high resale value - it's more sentimental than anything I wanna use it as a blog site for me and my family.

Thanks in advance for advice!

WCD
workingclassdog is offline  
Old 06-12-2008, 08:07 AM   #2 (permalink)
Senior Member
 
Damion's Avatar
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 2,719
Damion has a brilliant futureDamion has a brilliant futureDamion has a brilliant futureDamion has a brilliant futureDamion has a brilliant futureDamion has a brilliant futureDamion has a brilliant futureDamion has a brilliant futureDamion has a brilliant futureDamion has a brilliant futureDamion has a brilliant future
 



Put a $100 offer on the table and see what he counters with, then you will get an idea what the sellers idea is of a fair offer.

And you'll get an idea if it's within your budget as well.


If the domain doesn't have brand-ability or a high resale value, then $100 is a decent offer to start with.
__________________
★★★ The 5 Minute Deployment Tool Every Domainer Should Have In Their Domaining Toolbox! ★★★

Damion is offline  
Old 06-18-2008, 06:31 PM   #3 (permalink)
New Member
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 22
tyggemannen is an unknown quantity at this point
 



Agree. And also consider what the domain is worth for you, not only what it is worth on the open marked.
tyggemannen is offline  
Old 06-18-2008, 06:34 PM   #4 (permalink)
Business Member

 
Corey's Avatar
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Australia
Posts: 4,201
Corey has a reputation beyond reputeCorey has a reputation beyond reputeCorey has a reputation beyond reputeCorey has a reputation beyond reputeCorey has a reputation beyond reputeCorey has a reputation beyond reputeCorey has a reputation beyond reputeCorey has a reputation beyond reputeCorey has a reputation beyond reputeCorey has a reputation beyond reputeCorey has a reputation beyond repute
 


Special Olympics Protect Our Planet Animal Rescue
have you considered an alternative name?
__________________
Occupy.TV website/domain name for sale!
Corey is offline  
Old 06-18-2008, 07:13 PM   #5 (permalink)
Senior Member
 
nielsencl's Avatar
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Minneapolis
Posts: 2,513
nielsencl has a reputation beyond reputenielsencl has a reputation beyond reputenielsencl has a reputation beyond reputenielsencl has a reputation beyond reputenielsencl has a reputation beyond reputenielsencl has a reputation beyond reputenielsencl has a reputation beyond reputenielsencl has a reputation beyond reputenielsencl has a reputation beyond reputenielsencl has a reputation beyond reputenielsencl has a reputation beyond repute
 



Even estibot says you can not use them for any meaningful determination of real value. There are too many personal factors involved with domain name sales and purchases to really know how much a buyer will pay and how low a seller will go.

In your case you are in the worst possible position as a buyer. You really want the domain(s) and the seller doesn't really want to sell. Depending on what kind of trader the seller is they could really squeeze you on this.

In this case since the seller doesn't really want to sell, you should ask them to set a price. The reason I would do this is because you need to see where they are at to start with. If they say $100, then you could get them down to $40 maybe. If they say $1,000 then they may not go lower than $800.
????: NamePros.com http://www.namepros.com/showthread.php?t=480869

If you offer $100 they may go for it, of they may figure you are offering 25%-50% of what you will really pay. If you offer $20 they may decide you are never going to come up to the price they want and try to withdraw. If you say $200 and that is all you can pay, they may think you will still offer more if they hold out, or they may jump at that offer.

So, in my opinion, you should tell them to set a price and encourage them to make it fairly high. Sounds stupid, right? Well, if you do that it will put them off their guard. You make it easier for them to name a price that will make them quite happy. Then you know what their best hope is. If they say $300, then you know you should be able to get them down to $100-$200, since if $300 is the price of ultimate joy, $200 should be the price of happiness, and $100 may be the point of satisfaction.

If they say $1,000 or more, then you need to do some work to get them down to what you are willing to pay (say $200). At first this may seem impossible, and it may be but perhaps not. You can attack their price with examples of what the other TLDs have sold for or domains like this, or domains that are much better than this. You can talk about the lack of keywords, of the fact the domain has no PR and no backlinks. You can also mix in some positive things about the domain so you don't just sound like you are trying to pull them down. Try to state all the facts and just don't play up the positives too much.

If you have to offer a price, do some research and get as much information as you can as stated above when the price is too high. They wany $1,000 and you offer $200 and explain in as much detail as possible why. DON'T make anything up, just present all the facts and don't say too much that's positive.

Another option for buys like this is to try and find a name that's EVEN BETTER for what they say they want to use the domain for. If you can reg of find an even better domain then you may be able to make a trade or trade plus some cash. Heck, they might even give you some cash if you find a domain they really like...!

Every transaction is different. Your best advantage is to not be that interested in the selling or buying, and have as much information about the domain as possible.
nielsencl is offline  
Old 06-20-2008, 02:03 PM THREAD STARTER               #6 (permalink)
New Member
 
workingclassdog's Avatar
Join Date: May 2008
Location: NJ
Posts: 21
workingclassdog is an unknown quantity at this point
 



thanks to everyone for the great replies -- I'm going to go with the concept of having them set a base price and see where the negotiation goes -- I'll let ya know!
workingclassdog is offline  
Closed Thread


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools


Liquid Web Smart Servers  
All times are GMT -7. The time now is 04:14 PM.

Managed Web Hosting by Liquid Web
Domain name forum recommended by Domaining.com Powered by: vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0 Ad Management plugin by RedTyger