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information How Do You Sell Domains to Chinese Investors?

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With Chinese investors becoming the focal point of the entire domain industry, it stands to reason that at some point you'll probably be doing business with someone from China, Hong Kong, or Singapore. The Chinese culture has many different standards and protocols to abide by when conducting business, and I think that as Western investors, it's important to take on board these differences. It could lead to success when selling your domains to China.

It's worth pointing out that many investors in China will only buy domain names through trusted brokers, and it is often best to sell your domains (especially high value LL.com, LLL.com, NN.com, NNN.com, or NNNN.com) to China via an experienced broker with knowledge of the local market and extensive contacts. Take George Hong of Guta.com as an example: he's been responsible for the sale of many high-valued domains to China, and he can often produce higher sale prices thanks to his trustworthiness and his existing relationships with investors.

Relationships and trust are very important in traditional Chinese business, and I believe that getting the best sales results from Chinese investors will involve forging some sort of relationship first. I often send an introductory email first of all, explaining who I am (with links to my blog posts, social media, and more) and the type of domain names I have available for sale without listing the names or mentioning pricing. I've found the response to these emails has been positive, resulting in a couple of sales and the potential for more sales in the future.

I've also started to experiment with WeChat and QQ. These are both popular messaging platforms in China, and I've set up profiles on both, as well as adding both profile usernames to my email signature. WeChat includes a translation feature that is helpful when communicating via the app.

When it finally comes to sending over your domains and prices, consider the fact that China has a strong affinity to lucky numbers, especially the number 8. Pricing your domains in the right way can produce sales on its own. For example, instead of $8,000 why not try $8,888? Patterns and numeric combinations mean a lot to Chinese buyers, as is evident by some of the domain sales profiled on DNJournal.com, such as Rick Schwartz's sale of 989.com for $818,181.81

Bear in mind the fact that auspicious days can mean something to many Chinese investors. It is not uncommon for a Chinese investor to wait for a favorable day on which to place an offer for a domain name. If you contact a Chinese investor with a sales email, then it may be worth your while to wait until an auspicious day to send your email. This month, next Monday (9th) and Wednesday (11/11) are apparently two of the most favorable days this month.

With this information in mind, following up a sales email should be done after a couple of weeks, as the silence could be down to the fact that your new contact is waiting for an auspicious day.

Selling Chinese premium domains without contacting someone directly is, of course, possible. Marketplaces such as 4.CN, GoDaddy's Expired Auctions, and NameJet are popular destinations for Chinese buyers in categories such as four-letter .COM, four-number .COM, five-number .COM, and a number of other combinations.

These are my observances through my work with some LL.com and LLL.com domain names over the past few months, as well as the result of a lot of research.

Do you have any tips of your own when selling to Chinese investors?
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Thanks for tips @Avtar629 I have some .net's with 88 and want to try my luck with the market and will have to look into QQ.
 
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Thanks for tips @Avtar629 I have some .net's with 88 and want to try my luck with the market and will have to look into QQ.

I would tell everyone to sign up for companies like Domainero or Estibot to help you find similar domains that you want to target. these will help you automate the process of finding the whois data and get an email list in minutes.

But. who has the money for it right?
 
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I think it's more beneficial to install your own contacts.
After sometime you can have more connections than broker and save on commission.
any luck with finding the ridht investors?
 
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I'll wait till 8/8/18 and send offers for all my domains to Chinese buyers and make sure they receive it at 8:18 their time.
good idea wait till 2018
 
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Thank you for the marketplace links. Is 4.cn a good place to sell generic COMs in your experience? or are Chinese buyers just looking for LLLL.com and NNNN.com ?
 
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Add 888 to every name. I don't think I ever sold a domain to anyone in China but have just dropped names that they picked up.
 
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are there chinese companies looking for english domains?

emperorsteel.com
happyherbamerica.com
sonicsongs.com
 
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are there chinese companies looking for english domains?

My sense is no, not for a while. Between the Chinese Government curb on unapproved foreign investments and trade war, I just don't think there are much interests, if any.
 
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I own 8-8-1.com 8-8-2.com 8-8-3.com and 8-8-6.com
 
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What is the best website for selling Chinese domains?
 
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I had a bad experience with 4.cn.

The pages have had the same crappy translation for the past 8 years. If you speak some chinese you can get by.

Plenty of fake listings that persist forever on the site, they never get removed, not even if you report them.


You can't buy anything without making a deposit first into their system. This process takes a week+, good luck grabbing any deals like this.

When I made my second deposit, it never showed up in my account. It took multiple support requests (most were ignored completely, even those sent directly to my account rep), and a month of waiting to fix. No refund for my transaction costs even after a colossal fuckup like this.
 
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I bumped into this thread also trying to see if we can sell domains to Chinese market. I have some Chinese name 3 letter .co, maybe appealing to them, like cui.co, nen.co, zuo.co ....
 
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Unique content here... Thanks, OP, for opening this Thread!
So many inspiring ideas...
I mainly concentrate on Chinese 4L Quad Domains, so that's very nice. THANK YOU!
 
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I bumped into this thread also trying to see if we can sell domains to Chinese market. I have some Chinese name 3 letter .co, maybe appealing to them, like cui.co, nen.co, zuo.co ....
3L for Chinese is very hard without Vowels + V
It can only be a valuable combination of X, Y, S, C, and Z.
 
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3L for Chinese is very hard without Vowels + V
It can only be a valuable combination of X, Y, S, C, and Z.
I happen to have registered some back in 2010 as listed above, plus jei.co, nei.co, and some English short name .co like neck.co.... they are not .com though :)
 
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I happen to have registered some back in 2010 as listed above, plus jei.co, nei.co, and some English short name .co like neck.co.... they are not .com though :)
keep them, whish you good look; i "com" for you
 
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Considering the state of the industry in China, buyers are not as widely distributed, and they only focus on specific industries and businesses. For example, in e-commerce, individual sellers in China more often choose to promote through Alibaba, Jingdong, Jinduo, and seldom build their own brand marketing website and SEO promotion. And due to the end-user's online habits, policy preferences from the government, cultural differences, and the market environment, it may be even more difficult to reach a deal. I have not done market research, these are just feelings
 
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