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those are reg fee names,

people will just look for apartments in whatever region and sort by price, number of bedrooms/baths, and other amenities.

imo....
 
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hollywood luxury apartments is good.
 
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This is a nice batch....

What I suggest you do is check the search volumes and CPC for the related search terms for those domains.

People don't generally search for apartments in Google using defined criteria like amount of bedrooms, price and location... they would normally do a broad search like City+Apartments or Vice versa.... then define their search criteria on the actual site they land on. (The search volumes will validate this)

As far as the pricing is concerned, I think that you would need to take the following into consideration: search volumes, cpc, previous sales history of similar domains and how long you are willing to wait for sale.

Might be a good idea to find a few estate agents who specialize in luxury apartments across the U.S and see if you could sell them the entire portfolio.
 
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not to much because it is geo targeted so it is only restricted for those area
 
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those are reg fee names,

people will just look for apartments in whatever region and sort by price, number of bedrooms/baths, and other amenities.

imo....


Some of these names have been registered for years and still are. I was lucky to acquire some of these through different means.

These names are certainly in demand and the search volume data and cpc as well as the previous sales history proves it.

My question is more of how much to price these, just looking for a second opinion on pricing.




This is a nice batch....

What I suggest you do is check the search volumes and CPC for the related search terms for those domains.

People don't generally search for apartments in Google using defined criteria like amount of bedrooms, price and location... they would normally do a broad search like City+Apartments or Vice versa.... then define their search criteria on the actual site they land on. (The search volumes will validate this)

As far as the pricing is concerned, I think that you would need to take the following into consideration: search volumes, cpc, previous sales history of similar domains and how long you are willing to wait for sale.

Might be a good idea to find a few estate agents who specialize in luxury apartments across the U.S and see if you could sell them the entire portfolio.


Thanks deez007 , Some of the best ones have a search volume between 1k - 10k and a cpc upto $5 or more which i think is pretty good given these are specific to a certain city only, others a little lesser.

Agree with you on the search criteria.



not to much because it is geo targeted so it is only restricted for those area

Of course I'm not comparing them to apartments.com which would be more of a high 6 - 7 figure name .
 
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What do you think would be a good place to find such estate agents or a good platform to sell these individually? Google would certainly require much more work and time to find end users since such data would be scatterd all over the place.

Unfortunately I don't know of anywhere off hand...... I think your best bet would be Google or Superpages - yeah it will probably be a pain doing the ground work but i think it could be worth the effort.
 
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These names are certainly in demand and the search volume data and cpc as well as the previous sales history proves it.

My question is more of how much to price these in the current scenario,rather than if these will sell.

HI

it's one thing to look at "data" and try to derive whether a conceived domain name from those results, will have value or potential.

to further conclude that such names conceived "are certainly in demand", simply based on "svd" and previous sales history proves it.....

is a very flawed premise.

since you don't own any of the names from that previous sales history, and/or until your names sell for as much or more than those did.....and/or unless you have received and declined offers within those past history ranges...and/or they receive traffic that converts to income....then there are no facts to substantiate such claims.

now on the other hand...

if "you think" your names, are as valuable as those that were sold in the past, then just price your names for the same amount..... if you get an incoming offer.

i won't tell you what price to give, if you are soliciting.

Good Luck!

imo.....
 
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Unfortunately I don't know of anywhere off hand...... I think your best bet would be Google or Superpages - yeah it will probably be a pain doing the ground work but i think it could be worth the effort.

Thanks deez
HI

it's one thing to look at "data" and try to derive whether a conceived domain name from those results, will have value or potential.

to further conclude that such names conceived "are certainly in demand", simply based on "svd" and previous sales history proves it.....

is a very flawed premise.

since you don't own any of the names from that previous sales history, and/or until your names sell for as much or more than those did.....and/or unless you have received and declined offers within those past history ranges...and/or they receive traffic that converts to income....then there are no facts to substantiate such claims.

now on the other hand...

if "you think" your names, are as valuable as those that were sold in the past, then just price your names for the same amount..... if you get an incoming offer.

i won't tell you what price to give, if you are soliciting.

Good Luck!

imo.....

I have not marketed these domains actively as yet and still had starting offers in the $xxx range from fellow domainers(not end users) without soliciting.
 
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