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tips Tips for Buying Brandable Domain Names

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Buying brandable domain names is a great way to make money in the domain industry. Brandable names are often sold to startups because they are, you guessed it, brandable. In other words, they work well as brand names for companies to use and build brands on. Since brandable domains often sell for between $2,000 and $5,000 to end users, they are great names to consider investing in. Here are some tips to help you find brandable domain names.


Buy Names With End Users in Mind

It's important to buy brandable domain names that end users would want to use. In order to better understand the names that end users value the most, domain investor should do outbound sales with some of their names. A lot can be learned from the interest (or lack thereof) that end-users show for your domains.

End users are especially important for brandable domains, because the appeal of a name to end users will determine whether that domain name is ever turned into a brand, and thus, whether it truly qualifies as a brandable.


Domain Age Matters (Usually)

An older domain with a history usually has more value than a brand-new hand-registered domain name. Why does age matter? In general, older domains perform better in terms of SEO, which is a factor that your potential buyer may consider while they research the perfect domain name to purchase.


Does this Mean that Hand-Registered Names are Worthless?

No. Every good domain name has been registered at one point in time. If you find a good enough domain, its age won’t matter. If you are willing and able to hold on to the domains you hand register for a while, they will likely increase in value over time as other good alternatives become more scarce and are built into brands. For this reason, good domains are becoming more difficult to find and hand register. With that in mind, a newer investor might try to find a quality name on the aftermarket, rather than trying to find value in a domain that has never been registered.


Where Can I Buy Domains?

There are many ways to buy a domain name besides hand registering. You can use domain drop catching services to purchase domains, which have expired and are in the process of "dropping" from registrars, within a split second of their availability. You can also visit auction sites to bid on domain names, or go to the NamePros Marketplace to purchase domains from other domainers. You can even email the owners of domains that you like and try to purchase directly from them.


What Makes a Name Brandable?

Remember, keep the end-user in mind. For brandable domains, you could begin by looking for two-word domains that have meaning and are easy to say and spell. Think of common phrases, words that go together, and cute and short names. You want to find domains that flow well and pass the radio test: they sound good, are memorable, and can be spelled without error when heard on the radio.

For example, “NamePros” is a brandable domain name because it contains two words that make sense together, it's easy to spell, and it's memorable. NamePros also sounds good, and it has meaning - NamePros is a site for professional domainers: Name Professionals.

If a name sounds good, has a meaning that would appeal to end users, and is short and easy to spell, then chances are good that it will make a great brandable name.


Estibot Helps Estimate a Domain’s Value

Estibot is a domain name appraisal tool that picks up multiple metrics on domain names, including traffic, type-in searches, domain age, etc. This data should not be your deciding factor when buying a name, but all of these metrics can influence a domain’s value, because buyers often value them when purchasing domains. If your buyer thinks that the appraisal matters, then it matters - period.


Apply this knowledge to your domain investing, and you can begin to register and sell brandable domain names.
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Good post, Andrew! Thanks for sharing your tips with us.B-)
 
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Thanks for the tips. .. I'll take note.
 
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Estibot Helps Estimate a Domain’s Value

First off, thank you for sharing Andrew.

I would caution members about relying on Estibot for short brandable domains. Estibot's appraisals rely heavily on search engine stats such as Cost Per Clicks and Monthly Search Volume. While this might help show which keywords pair well, it does not help 5L and 6L Brandables. Estibot appraisals has helped me more with Geo Domains when search engine stats are more targeted to the buyer.

When I started using estibot for short brandable domains, I passed on many good brandables because of the low appraisals and registered many bad brandables because of the high appraisals. The metric of good and bad is based on brandable marketplace acceptance percentages.
 
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Thanks so much for your post.
 
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First off, thank you for sharing Andrew.

I would caution members about relying on Estibot for short brandable domains. Estibot's appraisals rely heavily on search engine stats such as Cost Per Clicks and Monthly Search Volume. While this might help show which keywords pair well, it does not help 5L and 6L Brandables. Estibot appraisals has helped me more with Geo Domains when search engine stats are more targeted to the buyer.

When I started using estibot for short brandable domains, I passed on many good brandables because of the low appraisals and registered many bad brandables because of the high appraisals. The metric of good and bad is based on brandable marketplace acceptance percentages.


Preach Jesus!!
 
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I agree that Estibot advise will do more harm than use. Estibot puts lots of value on gross non-brandable typos.

Age and SEO thing is arguable as well.
 
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First off, thank you for sharing Andrew.

I would caution members about relying on Estibot for short brandable domains. Estibot's appraisals rely heavily on search engine stats such as Cost Per Clicks and Monthly Search Volume. While this might help show which keywords pair well, it does not help 5L and 6L Brandables. Estibot appraisals has helped me more with Geo Domains when search engine stats are more targeted to the buyer.

When I started using estibot for short brandable domains, I passed on many good brandables because of the low appraisals and registered many bad brandables because of the high appraisals. The metric of good and bad is based on brandable marketplace acceptance percentages.


I tried Estibot for valuation but you are right it's kinda wonky. can you recommend for me and everyone else reading this then which is a better option?
 
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There are some end users I know that use Estibot. So there is somewhat of a "the customer is always right" factor that plays into my thinking.

I've also looked at quite a bit of data of different brandables that have sold in the past and there is a correlation between brandable sales and Estibot value.

My advice would be to use Estibot as part of your valuation process but definitely not as the main only part. There are always exceptions.
 
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nice article.
i really would like to know how do you reach enduser for a outbound sale..
 
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okay? so what should be the "main" part then? please? thanks.
 
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@pablohc86

It really depends on the name. Google?
 
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How would Estibot know the value of Brandable, excluding kw+kw?
Made-up brandables don't get many search results and they are not searched a lot for.
Estibot would have valued all of them at zero, as domainindex does, if not for rule in its algorithm that allocates % of value of the kw.com to kwtypo.com or kw+L.com, kw+LL.com
As a result, estibot can put a high value at really bad typo that can lead an unexperienced buyer to waste money on those.
 
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I tried Estibot for valuation but you are right it's kinda wonky. can you recommend for me and everyone else reading this then which is a better option?

Study, study study. NamePros has it all...

If you're new to brandables and want to dabble in 5L and 6L domains, keep note of what sells on NamePros and what sells of the expireds. The best teacher IMO is going through 5L and 6L brandables on ExpiredDomains.net everyday. Do a mock experiment before you waste money.

Make a list of domains you think are brandable, and at the end each day/week/month, do a bulk WHOIS on the domains you saw value in. You'll find patterns of what other people are registering based off words, look, sound, drops, year first regged, SV, prior history, suffixes, prefixes, etc. Most good 5L/6L expired domains are regged within 1 day of being dropped. When you get good, you'll find 50% of the domains you saw value in are registered in the first day. This is a sign you're starting to understand.

I've also looked at quite a bit of data of different brandables that have sold in the past and there is a correlation between brandable sales and Estibot value.

Are you referring to 5L and 6L brandables or just keyword brandables?

If anybody has an active estibot account, run a bulk search on 5L / 6L BrandBucket domains that sold. The 5L domain I sold on BB was 50X estibots appraisal. I'm sure you'll find a similar if not bigger difference between the price valued by Estibot and the actual price of the sale.
 
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@pablohc86

It really depends on the name. Google?
i can agree but i still think that brandable domains are the niche of domains with less possibility to do outbound sales.
Btw recently i'm trying to purchase brandable already developed at least 1 time with more than one business active using the same name.
I research biz on google, facebook, twitter, linkedin and so on.
In the end i still think that do this could have problem because is not legit to sell a brandable to a biz owner if that domain match his biz name.
 
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You guys bring up some good points, probably with 5L and 6L and pure brandables Estibot values play less of a factor and maybe aren't a factor. The data I looked at is what you can find from a quick google search for brandable sales.
 
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Thanks for the article Andrew :)


One question:

You mention brandable names are often sold to new startups, and suggest reaching out to potential end users. But how does one find and contact new startups to reach out to them when they are in the process of establishing the business, and so have no online presence until they've bought a domain name (catch-22)?

Thanks
 
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i really would like to know how do you reach enduser for a outbound sale..

Hardwork and Creativity...

5/6L - Brandable Marketplaces

KeyWord - email relevant domains found via NameDroppers.com

For example:

upload_2016-2-24_16-36-52.png


If you believe you have the superior name, then look up the WHOIS, and send emails.

Research the WHOIS owner. If you see they own 500 domains via WHOIS.DomainTools.com, you might want to treat them more like a domainer, or somebody with knowledge of the industry. If they only own a few domains, it might be a sign they don't know the domain industry and the benefits of a brandable domain. A lot of times endusers reg domains with three words because they weren't able to register the two words they wanted at the time or registration. With this logic, MyAnalyzerCloud.com is probably the enduser for AnalyzerCloud.com

Don't be that guy that keeps spamming me with something like MyMikes.info or MikesHouse.info because I own Mikes.info. You emails will get spammed if you do this enough. Email the only .info/.net/.org if you have the .com. Lastly, like everything else in domaining, be mindful of trademarks.
 
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Thanks for the article Andrew :)


One question:

You mention brandable names are often sold to new startups, and suggest reaching out to potential end users. But how does one find and contact new startups to reach out to them when they are in the process of establishing the business, and so have no online presence until they've bought a domain name (catch-22)?

Thanks

If your name targets a particular niche then hitting up sites, publications or trade shows specific to that niche are a good place to start.

Also, you can try to find an established business online that has a 2nd tier domain name and make your pitch to them.
 
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Hardwork and Creativity...

5/6L - Brandable Marketplaces

KeyWord - email relevant domains found via NameDroppers.com

For example:

Show attachment 24922

If you believe you have the superior name, then look up the WHOIS, and send emails.

Research the WHOIS owner. If you see they own 500 domains via WHOIS.DomainTools.com, you might want to treat them more like a domainer, or somebody with knowledge of the industry. If they only own a few domains, it might be a sign they don't know the domain industry and the benefits of a brandable domain. A lot of times endusers reg domains with three words because they weren't able to register the two words they wanted at the time or registration. With this logic, MyAnalyzerCloud.com is probably the enduser for AnalyzerCloud.com

Don't be that guy that keeps spamming me with something like MyMikes.info or MikesHouse.info because I own Mikes.info. You emails will get spammed if you do this enough. Email the only .info/.net/.org if you have the .com. Lastly, like everything else in domaining, be mindful of trademarks.
A similar tools is: ZFBot
 
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A similar tools is: ZFBot

A good tool for domains with 50+ endusers.

Do you know how to add spaces with them? I used NameDroppers because of this. ZFBot only returned 2 results for AnalyzeCloud, and that's because I only know how to use starts with and ends with. I can't find how to search containing multiple words.
 
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Study, study study. NamePros has it all...

If you're new to brandables and want to dabble in 5L and 6L domains, keep note of what sells on NamePros and what sells of the expireds. The best teacher IMO is going through 5L and 6L brandables on ExpiredDomains.net everyday. Do a mock experiment before you waste money.

Make a list of domains you think are brandable, and at the end each day/week/month, do a bulk WHOIS on the domains you saw value in. You'll find patterns of what other people are registering based off words, look, sound, drops, year first regged, SV, prior history, suffixes, prefixes, etc. Most good 5L/6L expired domains are regged within 1 day of being dropped. When you get good, you'll find 50% of the domains you saw value in are registered in the first day. This is a sign you're starting to understand.



Are you referring to 5L and 6L brandables or just keyword brandables?

If anybody has an active estibot account, run a bulk search on 5L / 6L BrandBucket domains that sold. The 5L domain I sold on BB was 50X estibots appraisal. I'm sure you'll find a similar if not bigger difference between the price valued by Estibot and the actual price of the sale.


you know? that's exactly what I was looking for that info. see recently I registered a domain that I later found out was dropped back in 2010. I'm like what the heck? then I realized it wasn't so great. if it was someone woulda kept it or snatched it up at drop.

who.is doesn't really tell you if a domain was registered before. just that it's available. is there a whois service that gives you that info?
 
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If your name targets a particular niche then hitting up sites, publications or trade shows specific to that niche are a good place to start.
"Sites" are not new startups, and trade shows are surely not useful (I'm asking not contradicting :) )
Many companies at trade shows are showing their trade, and already have a website/domain name. even if they didn't, the chance of having a domain name suitable is low IMO.

Plus, travelling and physically networking to sell domain names sounds like a lot of work for little gain (hard work is essential, but all online IMO).

Also, you can try to find an established business online that has a 2nd tier domain name and make your pitch to them.
I was really asking about how to contact startups as you said they are the ones who mostly buy brandables :)


Thanks discussing, I'm sincerely just trying to get ideas not argue :)
 
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who.is doesn't really tell you if a domain was registered before. just that it's available. is there a whois service that gives you that info?
there's a whole wealth of info out there, you just have to search Google for what you need, and then bookmark ;)

Try
https://who.is/

Search for a domain and you get a link to see history. Not sure of the accuracy or completeness, but usually the previous historical records marry up with each other and current reg enough to prove useful.
 
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