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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.
Estibot Helps Estimate a Domain’s Value
Estibot does nothing but helps domainers to commit investment suicide. I wanted to buy a domain name last year and estibot valued it at $800 but after purchase I went back the following day only to be told my domain worth $0!

what? I became curious and decided to probe further and tried to know the value of Estibot itself - the result shocking. It valued itself at $0. If Estibot values itself $0 - worthless, why would anyone rely on it.

Hahaha. Just as I was typing this, I went back to estibot and here is it's value according its own self as at 25th of February 2016
 

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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.
Yes, I was going to ask about this. It would seem that perhaps a new startup is not interested in a name that has been passed around and around for 15 years. That's fine for a keyword domain perhaps, but I don't see that as being particularly attractive to a new startup.

Also, as far as SEO potential and ranking, again, without it being a keyword-rich domain, I am confused as to how that helps. For instance, if someone buys BlueBird.com they might rank for blue bird. Does this matter to a company that is selling accounting software?

I was interested in you mentioning reaching out to end users for brand names, as this is something I have wondered about, as in, is it possible? I get reaching out to an end user with a GEO or keyword domain, but how does one do that for a name like BlueBird.com or TravCo.com. The usual process of researching and reaching out to end users seems like it wouldn't work here. Obviously if you went to their website and found their contact information, they would already have their brand name. Buying BlueBird.com will not help them funnel more traffic... is there a way to find out startups in certain industries that are looking for names? That part confuses me so appreciate any insight into this.
 
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"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).


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 :)

Yes, thanks because this is also my question. Not trying to figure out a way to pitch a better name to someone who already has a name, although that's a great idea, but just trying to brainstorm and see if there is a way to pitch to true startups/
 
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thanks
but let me ask you a very simple question ...

you can not buy a domain... ( you are never the owner )
it is always just for rent

or isnt it ?
 
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For many brandables it may be easier to wait for the buyer to find you. You could try listing it on one of the marketplaces or Afternic.

It all depends on the name of course. Certain brandables can absolutely be sold through outbound. To be honest I don't know a whole lot about selling brandables through outbound. If I did I would have written "Tips on Selling Brandables" :)
 
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Silly article.

Brandable names rarely have specific end-users.

Estibot is the worst tool one can use to determine the value of brandable names

End users rarely care about domain age.
 
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I would agree on all your points except the appraisal service Estibot which is worthless and crappy. I never recommend any one to use this for any appraisal. Waste of time, energy and money.
 
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Silly article.

Brandable names rarely have specific end-users.

Estibot is the worst tool one can use to determine the value of brandable names

End users rarely care about domain age.

Why don't you tell us how you really feel?

As mentioned earlier there is plenty of data that shows brandable sales correlating with estibot value.
 
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Why don't you tell us how you really feel?

As mentioned earlier there is plenty of data that shows brandable sales correlating with estibot value.


Ex. I have several experiences. I will share one here.

I hand-registered baagu.com . Estibot value at that time is zero. I listed at Sedo, Afternic and Godaddy for $1000 (main reason - hand registration).

After sometime, I changed it to $2000 as I thought purchase price is irrelevant in determining the sale price. That is my base for 5-letter pronounceable .coms.


Bridgestone bought it through SEDO.


1. Real end users never care about domain age and other nonsense spread among domainers.

2. Except in rare cases, it is impossible for Estibot like tools unless it has significant traffic.

Now, they may be household names...otherwise, how can you valuate names like sony.com, nike.com, canon.com, hoda.com etc...


For me, Brandables are the most under-appreciated names due to common parameters spread in the world of domainers. Ex. traffic, ad cost, domain age...


Think in the angle of end users who want to start a business on a brandable name.

1. pronounceable

2. easy to remember

3. may think about availability of social media handles (may be)


Ex. I received up to $2000 inquiries on Digitalytics.com.....I did not even consider. For me, each name is an asset. I have patience to wait....Owners of brandable names need a lot of patience.
 
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Aged domains in new brand (categories) make no difference in seo terms or any logical rationale in brand development. Uber - Lyft - 58 - JD and deep pockets go together. Cognitive brands to the root domain might rise in value as AI deep learning is already beyond mortal comprehension. One things for sure AI algorithms do not age into account.
 
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Good advice dear.
Nice thinking.
 
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Why don't you tell us how you really feel?

As mentioned earlier there is plenty of data that shows brandable sales correlating with estibot value.

Andrew, you are confusing things. If estibot says for any valuable keyword +L or kw with typo in it $800-5000, then of course their will be value for THOSE THAT DID SELL at BB, BR, N because that is their price point. However, what you are forgetting is that 99% of those are worthless crap and they won't sell, get accepted to platforms etc., but they are still priced at that point.
 
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Good post considering very less articles you find on brandables than keywords.

And I think best way to market brandables is to wait for end user to reach you. Just my perspective.
 
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For many brandables it may be easier to wait for the buyer to find you. You could try listing it on one of the marketplaces or Afternic.

It all depends on the name of course. Certain brandables can absolutely be sold through outbound. To be honest I don't know a whole lot about selling brandables through outbound. If I did I would have written "Tips on Selling Brandables" :)
Fair enough. I was just really interested to hear you mention outbound sales and contacting end users in your post because lately I have been trying to determine whether or not there was a way to find out very early on about a startup who hadn't branded themselves yet. Alas, I cannot figure out a strategy and will continue to use SEDO to get my names out there.

Thanks for all your information.
 
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@nvdomains

Good reply. I learned a little something from your points.

@Sepia Marketing

I think a method for selling these types of names would be to set up your domain with a good lander with good SEO. (I've heard Efty landers have good SEO and I think BrandBucket's landers are pretty good.) Then maybe your domain will rank higher for whatever keyword you're targeting. If a potential buyer Googles that term and your domain pops up, you have a shot at selling it to them!
 
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@nvdomains

Good reply. I learned a little something from your points.

@Sepia Marketing

I think a method for selling these types of names would be to set up your domain with a good lander with good SEO. (I've heard Efty landers have good SEO and I think BrandBucket's landers are pretty good.) Then maybe your domain will rank higher for whatever keyword you're targeting. If a potential buyer Googles that term and your domain pops up, you have a shot at selling it to them!
Thanks, Andrew
 
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How can estibot or any other tool know the value of a brandable domain?
that is simply impossible

But that doesn 't make estibot a bad tool at all

You need to learn to use tools
In the way the they are made
And try to understand to work according to their own inner
logic in order to make the most of it
 
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If anybody has an active estibot account, run a bulk search on 5L / 6L BrandBucket domains that sold.

I'm more so curious to see how accurate they are with keyword domains.

Anybody with an Estibot account care to crunch the numbers for us?

BrandBucket Sales - Download the spreadsheet and run a Bulk Estibot appraisal.

First Two Estibot Appraisals:
1. $0
2. $75

The data I looked at is what you can find from a quick google search for brandable sales.

As mentioned earlier there is plenty of data that shows brandable sales correlating with estibot value.

Do you remember what you used to distinguish this correlation?
 

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Nice post. Also, sometimes just go with your gut. If it sounds nice, punchy, innovative or memorable (or even all 4 of these) then just go for it. Always check trademarks first of course.

Also you can try and imagine a use for names you are looking for, and use phonetics to further narrow down your search. For example, front spoken vowels are usually more ideal for lighter, sharper things, where as back spoken vowels are for more dull, blunt and larger objects.

ie: Think TWIG (light, small, can be sharp if your unlucky :P)
Think BRANCH (bigger than twig, heavier, thicker)
 
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Did not finish my post, pressed the wrong button!

Last item, TRUNK - large, big, thick heavy, more so than the rest.

There are other phonetic traits that work across all \ most languages, but I will not go into them here as it is a bit long.
 
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Brandables are sometimes tougher to figure out. If you’re not a linguist, then I think it takes a keen eye to determine how much a brandable could be worth because as many said, ‘Estibot’ is not the greatest valuation tool for Brandables.
I am studying the top sales for each week and each year to develop this ‘keen eye’. For the week of Feb 8th - Feb 14th, there were a number of brandable sales. I looked at the lengths, types of domain, search volumes, CPCs, age, brandability and the venues where they were sold. If you’d like to see the actual numbers, I created a spreadsheet that you can find on my website here. I studied all of the top sales and learned from all, but these are some of the points I took home from the brandable sales.
  1. Brandable Names CAN sell for top dollar even if they are without age, high search volumes or high CPCs (MyPingo.com, IXCapital.com, PepCart.com).
  2. Generic-keyword brandable names may sell higher because of their age (CustomFit.com was the highest selling brandable name that week)
  3. Note that none of the top sales were made by any of the brandable specific marketplaces. I am just studying the data, this fact does not mean that you should not list on any of these marketplaces.
  4. Great one-word brandable names are short and catchy (Bluo, Menz).
  5. Great two-word generic brandable names present the keywords in the right order. CustomFit not FitCustom; PepCart not CartPep; MyPingo not PingoMy.
  6. It’s tough to figure out what the Estibot values were for these before these were sold because Estibot’s algorithm seems to update values as sales are made.
P.S. If you are a more experience investor, some or all of these points may be already known to you. I am sharing for the benefit of myself and others who are new, and for guidance.
 
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