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domain The Unofficial NP Domain Appraisal Guide

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skyraider

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Hey everyone,
Here's my first attempt at a helpful article for us NP'ers: Domain Apprasial. If this isn't in the right section, please move it ;)

Article: How to better help a domain owner determine a domain's value


Many appraisers on NamePros simply post "Low to mid $xx" or "Low $xx IMO" or "High $xxx" without stating a reason for his/her valuation. In this thread, I hope to better the NamePros appraisal forum by providing suggestions for how appraisers can better assist the owner of a domain determine the value of his/her name in several different situations. To start off, let's look at the different types of major extensions in the most common order of what they're worth.

.com is the commercial extension. Typically, .com domains are worth the most.
.net used to be a "network" extension; however, it fits forums well and is used when the .com version of a domain isn't available.
.org is the most 'restricited' of the top 3 TLD's. By 'restricted', I mean that many .org names aren't worth much at all unless they are obviously useable for a nonprofit organization. Recently, however, with many other TLD's being taken, the value of a good .org has increased.
.biz is the business extension. Although not widely used, some businesses do have .biz domains. A commercial keyword ending with .biz can be quite valuble.
.us means .United States. Domains that would be usable to a United States reseller aiming its products at the U.S. market can be worth a good amount in .us.
.info domains are an intereted batch. .info domains can be registered for under $3; additionally, a premium .info domain is typically worth less than a premium .com or .net. There are exceptions; some buyers do indeed value .info's over other domains because of factors such as universality.

When appraising a domain, be sure to keep the following factors in mind: keyword frequency, length of the name, extension and relevancy of the extension.
Keyword frequency in search can be determined using the Google AdWords Keyword Tool. The more searches conducted on a particular keyword or set of keywords, the more valuble that keyword or set of keywords is as a domain name.
Length of the domain name is another important factor; users have an easier time remembering shorter names. In addition, longer domains may recieve less traffic than competitors because users simply don't want to type in computerdiscussions.com when they could go to pctalk.com, which is (let's pretend, at least) of similar or equal quality.
Relevancy of the extension is the most important factor in appraising a domain name. For example, EuropeanUnion.us does not fit its extension in that the EU is not a United States body. Another example: buycars.org may try to be a commercial site. However, since .org is typically used for non-profit groups, the site may not have much success.

Remember to keep all of the factors in mind when appraising a domain. Also, say more than "Mid $xx". Tell the owner what he/she needs to know to develop a sense of the domain's value.

~ Also include what you would pay ~

Recently, many appraisals here at NP have been based around what the appraiser thinks the value of the domain name is to a another reseller and to an end user. That's good, but it may not be all that helpful to the owner of the domain being appraised. Why?

The real value of a domain is what it sells for.
If you think that someone else may pay $250 (low $xxx) for a domain, but you're a frequent domain buyer and you're only willing to pay $25, then you should state that in the post. Tell the owner what you would pay, even if it's only $5. Here's why: if 5-15 appraisers are only willing to pay $5, the domain is likely worth $5 in the reseller market.

Example: if your domain recieves 10 appraisals, and 8 people say that it's only worth $10 because they aren't looking to develop a website around such a topic, then it gives the owner a good idea of what the domain is actually worth to domain resellers.

However, if the two remaining appraisers would pay $xxx because they plan to develop a website around that topic or may be interested in or capable of doing so, then the owner has an idea of approximately what percentage of the domain/website development market his or her domain name is marketable to.

Summary: in addition to reseller & development value estimations, tell the owner of a domain what you personally would pay for the domain, no matter how low, because a domain is only worth what it sells for.

~ Example: ~

Sports.us is the domain being appraised. You'd go to Overture and find that many people searched for "sports". You realize that sports are played in the United States, so the extension is relevant. The domain is short and sweet, adding to its value. Also, there are tons of results on Google for "sports". So you'd say:

"Since 'sports' had X searches this January on Overture and since it's very short and memorable, I'd say you could sell it for [price] to an end user and [price] to a domain investor. The extension doesn't hurt if you can find a user with a sports site targeting the United States market."

~ Example #2: ~

MarketForums.net is the domain being appraised (using this one b/c I own it). I'm the appraiser. I go to Overture and find high results for 'market' and 'forums', but not 'market forums'. On Google, however, there are surprisingly many results for "market forums", probably meaning that there's a large interest in the subject. So, search results are OK for this domain. The extension would be better in .com; however, .net does not bring the value down too much considering that many .net is often used for forums.

For an international market forum, this domain is good. To a developer wanting to start up a United States stock market forum, however, MarketForums.us may be better. To a domain investor, MarketForums.net would be the pick over MarketForums.us.

~ Example #3: Country Code Extensions ~

Beaches.sc (also mine) is the domain up for appraisal. On first sight, you might say "Registration fee; the extension hurts it." However, upon using your friend Google to research the .sc extension, you find that the ext. was created for the Seychelles, a beautiful French archipelago and a great tourist/vacation destination. In your appraisal, you should include that because the U.S. market for tourism to French lands is down at the moment because we're munching on freedom fries, beaches.sc could be used as .South Carolina.

Overture tells you that there are hundreds of thousands of results for beaches in South Carolina like Myrtle Beach. Enlighten the domain owner to the fact that with a good amount of development as a South Carolina beach information site, beaches.sc is an excellent keyword domain and would be worth [price]. However, to a domain investor, .sc may mean "source" (like whois.sc); "beaches source" makes no sense and wouldn't be worth much at all.

~ Example #4: 3-Letter Domains ~
When your appraise three-letter domains, take two main things into consideration: if the letters mean anything or are an acronym and the quality of the extension. FYI.co.in is likely worth more that QYX.com because FYI means "For Your Information", whereas QYX does not have a widely known meaning. 3-letter domains (LLL - Letter Letter Letter) are typically more valuble than LNL (Letter Number Letter) or NNL or NLN names because they're easier to pronounce.

~ Helping the domain owner: ~

Tell the person who posted the domain all of this info, including what market(s) the domain would be most valuble in and why. It helps him/her get a better feel for the value of the domain in different situations with different buyers. You should also get a feel for the value of certain extensions and for whether the market is "bull" or "bear". To keep up with the market, frequent sites such at DNJournal.com and the NamePros sales forums to see how much names are going for.

If you enjoyed my article and think other NP'ers could benefit from it, please send some $NP this way so I can sticky the thread.

Happy appraising! B-)
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
I agree about the "$XXX" style appraisals, to me that says "I really have very little idea what the domain is worth".

However are some obvious errors in this article,

".org names aren't worth much at all unless they are obviously useable for a nonprofit organization." - that view died years ago I think.

".info is the least valuble of the six extensions we've reviewed." - Have a look at dnjournals sales data for the last year or so. .info sales on average are substantially higher than .biz and .us.
 
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snoop said:
I agree about the "$XXX" style appraisals, to me that says "I really have very little idea what the domain is worth".

However are some obvious errors in this article,

".org names aren't worth much at all unless they are obviously useable for a nonprofit organization." - that view died years ago I think.

".info is the least valuble of the six extensions we've reviewed." - Have a look at dnjournals sales data for the last year or so. .info sales on average are substantially higher than .biz and .us.

There are exceptions to the lesser value of .org's and .info's. Thanks for the note; revisions made :)

Edit: I saw that this got moved. Wasn't exactly sure where to post it. Thanks.
 
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skyraider said:
.biz is the business extension. Although not widely used, some businesses do have .biz domains. A commercial keyword ending with .biz can be quite valuble.

Yes, good point :D

http://www.ibm.biz

It may be redirecting, but at least an MNC IBM didn't reject this extension totally.

same with

http://www.hewlettpackard.biz
 
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no probs, agree with what is written about .org now, though I still find the .info stuff strange, why do you think .info is weaker than .us and .biz?

Just look at dnjournals 2004 sales data and it is clear that .info is far stronger, of the top ten new tld sales, 9 were .info's.

http://www.dnjournal.com/archive/domainsales/2004-expanded-newtld.htm
 
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I liked the article. I generally agreed with all the points you made.

Tom
 
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very nice article for your first :tu:

good job! :)
 
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Good article, and I especially agree about not just posting a $xxx figure without providing additional guidance... otherwise it winds up being an empty appraisal.

But I concur with others: .info is not necessarily lower value than the other TLDs... mind you, I don't own an .info at present!

Nice work!

Rob
 
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skyraider said:
If you enjoyed my article and think other NP'ers could benefit from it, please send some $NP this way so I can sticky the thread.

Great work, sky. I'm stickying your thread for a week or so, on the house. :tu:
 
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A bit of a typo in the thread title: Apprasial

armstrong said:
Great work, sky. I'm stickying your thread for a week or so, on the house. :tu:

Excellent idea.

Just noticed a significant typo in the title of this thread; it's appraisal and not "Apprasial" ... if someone could please fix that :)

Rob
 
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Sky,
Excellent article.

One side note. I believe <some> "apparisers" here post pointless replies just to collect NP$.
 
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Midano said:
Sky,
I believe <some> "apprisers" here post pointless replies just to collect NP$.

Yep; the vast majority of appraisals that are less than 1 sentence long should simply be ignored.

AmCy
 
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-RJ-
Is there a way to turn NP$ and revenue sharing off in just the appraisals forum? This will discourage fake appraisers and eliminate junk replies.
 
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great thread. I agree with most of it, but i don't believe that .info is weakest of them all. It is hard to say and hard to distinguish them like that. It really depends on the keyword. Different extentions have different meanings
 
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I live in Thailand and we can hire hitmen very cheaply, possibly just a few NP's will do the trick

If you are dissatisfied with an appraisal, "reg fee", "I don't know this extension but--", "because the guy before gave it xx" , "I did not read the thread but--" etc,etc. then ,with the agreement of the committee (to be appointed) we can have the offending appraisers eliminated. A little drastic perhaps but it has to be done D-:

I am happy to donate a few NP's to get this going. B-)
 
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Midano said:
-RJ-
Is there a way to turn NP$ and revenue sharing off in just the appraisals forum? This will discourage fake appraisers and eliminate junk replies.

That might be a good idea; except folks who do it sincerely might be at 'loss' here.

Also, EXCELLENT article:tu:!

Awesome job! Keep up the good work!

:kickass:


True_Snake
 
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Awesome and very well constructed skyraider.
 
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Excellent guide, well worth the time to read it.
 
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Overall a very commendable attempt to instill some degree of rationality and logic into appraisals...although, it was quite a while ago when I concluded that the appraisal sections of domain forums were probably the least useful sections for me to spend time on.

Like some other members, I also see no evidence whatsoever to substantiate the comments about .info. In addition to the aftermarket sales data showing clear dominance of .info among all new tlds, its also the one with most pages indexed by major SEs like Google, has no restriction on its use, has the broadest possible usability of all tlds, and (IMO) is the ONLY perfect match for certain terms/areas/topics...let me give few examples:

Depression.info (versus Depression.com/.net/.org/.us/.biz.....etc. etc.)
Divorce.info (versus Divorce.com/.net/.org/.us/.biz...etc. etc.)
Pregnancy.info (versus Pregnancy.com/.net/.org/.us/.biz...etc. etc.)
Christianity.info ((versus Christianity.com/.net/.org/.us/.biz...etc. etc.)

In fact, one can find very few terms with which .info would seem a mismatch, including pure commercial terms such as Loans(.info), Cars(.info),
Mortgage(.info), Stocks(.info)...etc...etc.
 
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there are really 2 main points that I would like to bring up regarding this:

1. info is more valuable than .biz as it is more widely used, and even more so than .us.

2. You cannot really (IMO) say that an extension is valuable (I know, ive just done it) because its the overall domain which makes the value.
 
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Syndication

Hey Skyraider:

You are welcome to post your article in my domain blog if you like. You can add your credit and link to your site. If interested, let me know. Thanks.

AmCy

Midano said:
-RJ-
Is there a way to turn NP$ and revenue sharing off in just the appraisals forum? This will discourage fake appraisers and eliminate junk replies.

That's a solid idea, Midano. That'll work.

:great: :tu:

AmCy
 
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Wow that is a good guide!
 
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Thanks for the feedback & the complimentary sticky week :D

Like some other members, I also see no evidence whatsoever to substantiate the comments about .info. In addition to the aftermarket sales data showing clear dominance of .info among all new tlds, its also the one with most pages indexed by major SEs like Google, has no restriction on its use, has the broadest possible usability of all tlds, and (IMO) is the ONLY perfect match for certain terms/areas/topics...let me give few examples:

Right; that's why I made the point about .info's universiality. I do see why that could increase the value to the point that a premium .info could be worth more than a premium .biz or .us domain. Going over to make some edits :)
 
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Midano said:
-RJ-
Is there a way to turn NP$ and revenue sharing off in just the appraisals forum? This will discourage fake appraisers and eliminate junk replies.

That's a very good idea :imho:

Grégoire.
 
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