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Understanding type in traffic and parking

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MARK ROBERTS

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I have read through the Parking 101 and other parking threads for newbies to parking. Much of the basic and important information is pretty old and I don't know if it is still relevant. Also discussions seem to drift off topic making it hard to learn much.

I have some domain names with google keyword searches between 720 searches per month and 4k per month. Many are hand regs that have never been registered before. None of them are developed and I have not parked them yet. How do these search numbers relate to type in traffic and parking. Will these ad words search numbers translate into type in traffic or parking traffic.

I am still trying to wrap my head around these issues. Should I try parking these domains? Do these search numbers main anything? Any advice for a newbie parker would be greatly appreciated.
 
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Its all personal preference. I s no minimum. If I think it sounds good its done. Those are just certain things I consider. None more stronger then the other.

There is no set guarantee to this stuff.

so you don't look for rules
but go for your guts desision

that doesnt help much

the beauty of rules in this regard is :
you can follow and re-define and verify them

your guts are new everyday and not teachable

Hi @frank-germany , my comment is in a "co-signing" position with @baseballworld:

you have to get to a "point" or you get to that "point", naturally..... thru "trial and error".
this happens when one uses a *personal judgement method* for "each individual domain idea" that overtime, proved more successful than not.

that process of picking and choosing becomes the "gut instinct" and in many cases, it's the chief decision maker.


the longer you delve in domaining and allow your mind not to be framed, the more you can see beyond the limits set for you to think within.

:)

imo...
 
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I'm getting a bit concerned about direct navigation. Google seems to be grabbing the url from the address bar, and running it through their search. This means that there is a bit of filtering going on, and it seems you have to be Google friendly. I've also watched a lot of surfers, and they don't seem to know about the address bar. In fact many of them don't even display it.
 
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Hi @frank-germany , my comment is in a "co-signing" position with @baseballworld:

you have to get to a "point" or you get to that "point", naturally..... thru "trial and error".
this happens when one uses a *personal judgement method* for "each individual domain idea" that overtime, proved more successful than not.

that process of picking and choosing becomes the "gut instinct" and in many cases, it's the chief decision maker.


the longer you delve in domaining and allow your mind not to be framed, the more you can see beyond the limits set for you to think within.

:)

imo...


@biggie
my comment was targetting the rules that you have in mind when checking
expired domains net

like 10 backlinks
age > 5 years
CPC of < 50 USD

those rules are teachable and applicable to many

gut instict is not
 
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@biggie
my comment was targetting the rules that you have in mind when checking
expired domains net

like 10 backlinks
age > 5 years
CPC of < 50 USD

those rules are teachable and applicable to many

gut instict is not

Hi @frank-germany

i don't use expired domains net website, but i can tell you this:
links, age and cpc are not rules, they are attributes.

i may take CPC/EPC into consideration but those other attributes are pretty irrelevant to me

you can't teach what "age" means, when age is meaningless to end goal.

if we're talking about "parking and traffic" then age has no bearing if the name has no traffic.
if it has no traffic, then it won't produce ppc revenue

you can teach what links are, but you can't make a "mo-fo" go and check where each one is located, on each page of the website, where it resides.

you can teach what CPC is, but you can't know if that's what you'll get, if/when you ever get a click and depending on where it's parked.

when you really look at how many variables, can vary, "gut instinct" is the one thing you can bring to the table.

imo....
 
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Hi @frank-germany

i don't use expired domains net website, but i can tell you this:
links, age and cpc are not rules, they are attributes.

i may take CPC/EPC into consideration but those other attributes are pretty irrelevant to me

you can't teach what "age" means, when age is meaningless to end goal.

if we're talking about "parking and traffic" then age has no bearing if the name has no traffic.
if it has no traffic, then it won't produce ppc revenue

you can teach what links are, but you can't make a "mo-fo" go and check where each one is located, on each page of the website, where it resides.

you can teach what CPC is, but you can't know if that's what you'll get, if/when you ever get a click and depending on where it's parked.

when you really look at how many variables, can vary, "gut instinct" is the one thing you can bring to the table.

imo....


yes sure you are right..

but you didn't get my point at all

"rules"
are what you make up for yourself
and is not made by a 3rd party

"rules"
refers to what you are looking for
which criteria a domain should meet
"rules"= "criteria"
 
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yes sure you are right..

but you didn't get my point at all

"rules"
are what you make up for yourself
and is not made by a 3rd party

"rules"
refers to what you are looking for
which criteria a domain should meet
"rules"= "criteria"


Hey @frank-germany

perhaps we should clarify what a "rule" is, according to dictionary:

one of a set of explicit or understood regulations or principles governing conduct within a particular activity or sphere.

whereas, i don't see them as rules, but more like "guidelines":

A guideline is a statement by which to determine a course of action. A guideline aims to streamline particular processes according to a set routine or sound practice. By definition, following a guideline is never mandatory.

finally, lets clarify what "criteria" is:
a principle or standard by which something may be judged or decided.

so, if we agree on these definitions, then a "rule" is not equal to "criteria".

as criteria, is used to judge how well one follows the rule, and the rule, is typically developed from a list of guidelines.

"gut instinct" tells you when to deviate, adhere, question or ignore any rule, guideline or criteria, while on the hunt for whatever you "think at the time you thinking about it".

:)


imo....
 
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Hey @frank-germany

perhaps we should clarify what a "rule" is, according to dictionary:

one of a set of explicit or understood regulations or principles governing conduct within a particular activity or sphere.

whereas, i don't see them as rules, but more like "guidelines":

A guideline is a statement by which to determine a course of action. A guideline aims to streamline particular processes according to a set routine or sound practice. By definition, following a guideline is never mandatory.

finally, lets clarify what "criteria" is:
a principle or standard by which something may be judged or decided.

so, if we agree on these definitions, then a "rule" is not equal to "criteria".

as criteria, is used to judge how well one follows the rule, and the rule, is typically developed from a list of guidelines.

"gut instinct" tells you when to deviate, adhere, question or ignore any rule, guideline or criteria, while on the hunt for whatever you "think at the time you thinking about it".

:)


imo....


yes you are right

as I am not a native english speaker
and did not visit harvard school
..only a german university..

pardone moi


citeria= rules = set of guidelines -> for a program to follow
in order to achieve something
which makes it easy for me
as I don't have to work myself
 
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