IT.COM

10 Tips for Domain Beginners

Spaceship Spaceship
Watch
1. If English is not your first language, try to lean towards Brandable domains or short (4 Letter, 5 Letter) domains in the beginning. I can imagine a lot of crappy keyword domains being registered are because some people use translators or they don't yet understand what sounds good in proper english and what doesn't.

2. Don't just lurk. Frequent the forums and network with experienced domainers, share your feedback or opinion even if you're new. Join in on the discussions, find a mentor. It surprises me how helpful most members of the domaining community are with each other, after all, in a way we are all competitors, but unlike any other industry, we always try to give advice and tips - take advantage of it so that one day you too can give back too.

3. If you want to experiment first with hand-registering domain names, don't try to come up with names on your own just yet, as tempting as it may be. The "Available Domains" section should be one of your most frequented on Namepros: https://www.namepros.com/forums/available-domain-names.106/ - Experienced members are generous enough to share lists of domain names that are available to be registered. Sometimes you will land a gem within the bunch.

4. Most of the questions you may have right now have probably already been asked and answered hundreds of times already (literally) - pretend this forum is a book on an infomercial that you just paid money for and read. You have enough material here to answer almost anything you're thinking of. 95% of the posts/discussions on NP are on the topic of domains.

5. Before registering or buying a domain name, ask yourself this: "Is this domain name worthy enough for me to pay renewal fees on for at least 3 years?" - If it is not worth it to you to renew (at full cost) that domain name for 3 or more years, then you don't even see value in it, do you think someone else will? Remember, there are no 99 cent renewal coupons.

6. When growing your domain portfolio, keep it diversified. When you're new to domain investing, don't register 10 domains on the same topic or niche. If something is trending, buy 1 or 2 domains, not 10 or 20 because they're available. Trends can die quickly in this industry and it's easy to get carried away and find yourself with 30 renewal fees in 12 months on worthless domains or domains that won't have value for years, be prepared for that.

7. When first starting out, focus on flipping domains and not 'holding' them. Flipping means you acquire something and sell it asap for more than what you paid no matter how much more it is and grow from there. 'Holding' is acquiring a domain name and waiting for a much larger offer. Being new, you probably won't have a sense of what will attract that big offer so you may only have domains that can be sold for 1, 2, or 3x's what you paid for it to fellow and more experienced domainers. Once you start learning what consistently sells to other domainers for smaller profits, you'll begin learning what you should be holding onto yourself.

8. When you're thinking about registering or buying a domain name, think about who would want the domain and how much they would be willing to spend on it, this is usually based on how much money they can make with that particular domain. Example: If you come across a domain like CuteCatPictures.com, yes it sounds good, yes, a blog can be made out of it, it can be a site with Cute Cat Pictures, but most of these sites are hobby sites and they don't make serious money. If a website like this which could only generate $xx a month, do you think they're going to pay hundreds or thousands? No, more like $20 or $30. Your *big* sale for a name like this would most likely be low $xxx but that would be luck. Instead, focus on domains you know someone can make good money with. If someone can earn thousands a month operating on that domain, that's when you can expect reasonable offers.

9. Many new investors automatically fall in-love with a domain they own once they receive a $20 or $30 offer on it, they assume this person is making me an offer so it must be worth thousands. It's not. When starting out, sell, sell, sell. There may be a chance that you did let a good domain get away but at the end of the day the experience and knowledge you gained from doing these small deals will help get you to a higher level much more quickly and time is more valuable than money and there are always new opportunities every day.

10: If you're in need of cash flow, then you need to study up on contacting end users because chances are you won't be receiving offers on your names any time soon. If you're not in this for the long-haul (at least a year) then you shouldn't bother at all. I see a lot of people new to domain investing saying "I've had my domains listed on Sedo/GoDaddy/etc for a month and It hasn't sold or gotten any offers!?" - There is no expected time for something to sell. Many of the domain sales you see reported, the owners have held on to those names for years. So again, if you need cash flow quickly, focus on reading up how to contact people to make sales, not wait for them to come to you.

Good luck!
 
179
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Thanks, Nice Info for Beginners
 
0
•••
Thanks! Alot of useful information in here for beginners like me.
 
0
•••
thank you for sharing this lovely articles for beginners. I'm from one so Its useful to me.
 
0
•••
0
•••
1
•••
1
•••
I am only getting into this now, and interested in buying and reselling. Where do you track domains that are about to expire, or do you just pick a domain and keep an eye on the expiration date?
 
0
•••
I am only getting into this now, and interested in buying and reselling. Where do you track domains that are about to expire, or do you just pick a domain and keep an eye on the expiration date?
Expireddomains.net
 
0
•••
0
•••
Hi @tomcarl,

Thanks for sharing your blog It would be helpful to us.
 
0
•••
Here is the number #1 tip for beginners keep returning to Namepros. It doesn't matter if you don't have domains as long as it interests you. There will come a time you know exactly what domains you want.

Don't be this new member join, say hello get a warm welcome, post your sentimental domain/s for appraisal / reality check only tell experienced domainers are wrong and leave.​

Many assume it may take moments to learn domaining but it may take time to perfect buying let alone negotiating and knowing legal, technical side and how to market them.

Over time every ones points of view changes on everything no matter how stubborn you are as speculation changes based on others situations reactions, personal results as well as sales figures. Trends offer opportunity but make sure they are sales trends not buying trends.
 
1
•••
Good advices. As a new domainers, I recognize myself already in some of the "what not to do".

Points 1 and 10 really don't go together. English not being my primary language, it makes it really hard to reach end-users. The french market is very limited.

So while I learn and need cash flow, I stick with short 4L names to get the feeling to making deals and make contacts and rapidly increase my buying power. I think all newbie should start by flipping 4Ls which are super hot and easy to deal right now.
Thank you, this is very useful
 
0
•••
Awesome tips, every newbie need to read these tips carefully and follow it. Thanks for all who contributed to this thread. (y)
 
1
•••
Thanks @tomcarl for your 10 Commandments of Beginners Domain Wisdom (y)
 
0
•••
Just wanted to say this is absolutely awesome! I/m just starting out here but this post has by far been the most helpful as of yet!
 
1
•••
Thankyou for this amazing read
 
0
•••
I strongly disagree with tip #1. In my country where English is not the primarily languages, a lot of time brand names are made up by people who can speak “business English”, that is, they can have 2 hr sales meeting with a customer and golf with customers. But they can’t do marketing. The names and slogan they come up with are usually horrific.

Near the front door of the company I work for is a poster that says Smartouch, where “smart” and “ouch” are of different colors. Whoever came up with the name probably doesn’t understand the difference between the unimaginative “smart touch” and laughable “smart ouch”.

One domain I like is bloooom.com . Now, try to explain the difference between blooom (bad) and bloooom (good) to them.

In my opinion, if you can’t speak fluent English, you should get opinion from someone who does.
 
0
•••
very helpful for beginners that will show the path to buy first valuable domain and to sell first domain. i will definitely follow this. thanks
 
1
•••
1. If English is not your first language, try to lean towards Brandable domains or short (4 Letter, 5 Letter) domains in the beginning. I can imagine a lot of crappy keyword domains being registered are because some people use translators or they don't yet understand what sounds good in proper english and what doesn't.

2. Don't just lurk. Frequent the forums and network with experienced domainers, share your feedback or opinion even if you're new. Join in on the discussions, find a mentor. It surprises me how helpful most members of the domaining community are with each other, after all, in a way we are all competitors, but unlike any other industry, we always try to give advice and tips - take advantage of it so that one day you too can give back too.

3. If you want to experiment first with hand-registering domain names, don't try to come up with names on your own just yet, as tempting as it may be. The "Available Domains" section should be one of your most frequented on Namepros: xxxxxc - Experienced members are generous enough to share lists of domain names that are available to be registered. Sometimes you will land a gem within the bunch.

4. Most of the questions you may have right now have probably already been asked and answered hundreds of times already (literally) - pretend this forum is a book on an infomercial that you just paid money for and read. You have enough material here to answer almost anything you're thinking of. 95% of the posts/discussions on NP are on the topic of domains.

5. Before registering or buying a domain name, ask yourself this: "Is this domain name worthy enough for me to pay renewal fees on for at least 3 years?" - If it is not worth it to you to renew (at full cost) that domain name for 3 or more years, then you don't even see value in it, do you think someone else will? Remember, there are no 99 cent renewal coupons.

6. When growing your domain portfolio, keep it diversified. When you're new to domain investing, don't register 10 domains on the same topic or niche. If something is trending, buy 1 or 2 domains, not 10 or 20 because they're available. Trends can die quickly in this industry and it's easy to get carried away and find yourself with 30 renewal fees in 12 months on worthless domains or domains that won't have value for years, be prepared for that.

7. When first starting out, focus on flipping domains and not 'holding' them. Flipping means you acquire something and sell it asap for more than what you paid no matter how much more it is and grow from there. 'Holding' is acquiring a domain name and waiting for a much larger offer. Being new, you probably won't have a sense of what will attract that big offer so you may only have domains that can be sold for 1, 2, or 3x's what you paid for it to fellow and more experienced domainers. Once you start learning what consistently sells to other domainers for smaller profits, you'll begin learning what you should be holding onto yourself.

8. When you're thinking about registering or buying a domain name, think about who would want the domain and how much they would be willing to spend on it, this is usually based on how much money they can make with that particular domain. Example: If you come across a domain like CuteCatPictures.com, yes it sounds good, yes, a blog can be made out of it, it can be a site with Cute Cat Pictures, but most of these sites are hobby sites and they don't make serious money. If a website like this which could only generate $xx a month, do you think they're going to pay hundreds or thousands? No, more like $20 or $30. Your *big* sale for a name like this would most likely be low $xxx but that would be luck. Instead, focus on domains you know someone can make good money with. If someone can earn thousands a month operating on that domain, that's when you can expect reasonable offers.

9. Many new investors automatically fall in-love with a domain they own once they receive a $20 or $30 offer on it, they assume this person is making me an offer so it must be worth thousands. It's not. When starting out, sell, sell, sell. There may be a chance that you did let a good domain get away but at the end of the day the experience and knowledge you gained from doing these small deals will help get you to a higher level much more quickly and time is more valuable than money and there are always new opportunities every day.

10: If you're in need of cash flow, then you need to study up on contacting end users because chances are you won't be receiving offers on your names any time soon. If you're not in this for the long-haul (at least a year) then you shouldn't bother at all. I see a lot of people new to domain investing saying "I've had my domains listed on Sedo/GoDaddy/etc for a month and It hasn't sold or gotten any offers!?" - There is no expected time for something to sell. Many of the domain sales you see reported, the owners have held on to those names for years. So again, if you need cash flow quickly, focus on reading up how to contact people to make sales, not wait for them to come to you.

Good luck!

Thanks for sharing these great tips(y)
 
0
•••
Thank you for a most helpful post; I'm only hear a few hours and appreciate wiser heads pointing me in the right direction.

A few hours is still a good amount of time to do work in increments.

The direction will get clearer and clearer the more time is spent, so keep it it.
 
0
•••
1. If English is not your first language, try to lean towards Brandable domains or short (4 Letter, 5 Letter) domains in the beginning. I can imagine a lot of crappy keyword domains being registered are because some people use translators or they don't yet understand what sounds good in proper english and what doesn't.

2. Don't just lurk. Frequent the forums and network with experienced domainers, share your feedback or opinion even if you're new. Join in on the discussions, find a mentor. It surprises me how helpful most members of the domaining community are with each other, after all, in a way we are all competitors, but unlike any other industry, we always try to give advice and tips - take advantage of it so that one day you too can give back too.

3. If you want to experiment first with hand-registering domain names, don't try to come up with names on your own just yet, as tempting as it may be. The "Available Domains" section should be one of your most frequented on Namepros: https://www.namepros.com/forums/available-domain-names.106/ - Experienced members are generous enough to share lists of domain names that are available to be registered. Sometimes you will land a gem within the bunch.

4. Most of the questions you may have right now have probably already been asked and answered hundreds of times already (literally) - pretend this forum is a book on an infomercial that you just paid money for and read. You have enough material here to answer almost anything you're thinking of. 95% of the posts/discussions on NP are on the topic of domains.

5. Before registering or buying a domain name, ask yourself this: "Is this domain name worthy enough for me to pay renewal fees on for at least 3 years?" - If it is not worth it to you to renew (at full cost) that domain name for 3 or more years, then you don't even see value in it, do you think someone else will? Remember, there are no 99 cent renewal coupons.

6. When growing your domain portfolio, keep it diversified. When you're new to domain investing, don't register 10 domains on the same topic or niche. If something is trending, buy 1 or 2 domains, not 10 or 20 because they're available. Trends can die quickly in this industry and it's easy to get carried away and find yourself with 30 renewal fees in 12 months on worthless domains or domains that won't have value for years, be prepared for that.

7. When first starting out, focus on flipping domains and not 'holding' them. Flipping means you acquire something and sell it asap for more than what you paid no matter how much more it is and grow from there. 'Holding' is acquiring a domain name and waiting for a much larger offer. Being new, you probably won't have a sense of what will attract that big offer so you may only have domains that can be sold for 1, 2, or 3x's what you paid for it to fellow and more experienced domainers. Once you start learning what consistently sells to other domainers for smaller profits, you'll begin learning what you should be holding onto yourself.

8. When you're thinking about registering or buying a domain name, think about who would want the domain and how much they would be willing to spend on it, this is usually based on how much money they can make with that particular domain. Example: If you come across a domain like CuteCatPictures.com, yes it sounds good, yes, a blog can be made out of it, it can be a site with Cute Cat Pictures, but most of these sites are hobby sites and they don't make serious money. If a website like this which could only generate $xx a month, do you think they're going to pay hundreds or thousands? No, more like $20 or $30. Your *big* sale for a name like this would most likely be low $xxx but that would be luck. Instead, focus on domains you know someone can make good money with. If someone can earn thousands a month operating on that domain, that's when you can expect reasonable offers.

9. Many new investors automatically fall in-love with a domain they own once they receive a $20 or $30 offer on it, they assume this person is making me an offer so it must be worth thousands. It's not. When starting out, sell, sell, sell. There may be a chance that you did let a good domain get away but at the end of the day the experience and knowledge you gained from doing these small deals will help get you to a higher level much more quickly and time is more valuable than money and there are always new opportunities every day.

10: If you're in need of cash flow, then you need to study up on contacting end users because chances are you won't be receiving offers on your names any time soon. If you're not in this for the long-haul (at least a year) then you shouldn't bother at all. I see a lot of people new to domain investing saying "I've had my domains listed on Sedo/GoDaddy/etc for a month and It hasn't sold or gotten any offers!?" - There is no expected time for something to sell. Many of the domain sales you see reported, the owners have held on to those names for years. So again, if you need cash flow quickly, focus on reading up how to contact people to make sales, not wait for them to come to you.

Good luck!
Thank you so much for sharing!
 
0
•••
Nice set of advices for beginners like me. I'm impressed. NP is like a novel, free to read and learn.
 
0
•••
Thanks for sharing, Nice Info for Beginners
 
0
•••
Thank you for sharing! Great tips
 
1
•••
1. If English is not your first language, try to lean towards Brandable domains or short (4 Letter, 5 Letter) domains in the beginning. I can imagine a lot of crappy keyword domains being registered are because some people use translators or they don't yet understand what sounds good in proper english and what doesn't.

2. Don't just lurk. Frequent the forums and network with experienced domainers, share your feedback or opinion even if you're new. Join in on the discussions, find a mentor. It surprises me how helpful most members of the domaining community are with each other, after all, in a way we are all competitors, but unlike any other industry, we always try to give advice and tips - take advantage of it so that one day you too can give back too.

3. If you want to experiment first with hand-registering domain names, don't try to come up with names on your own just yet, as tempting as it may be. The "Available Domains" section should be one of your most frequented on Namepros: https://www.namepros.com/forums/available-domain-names.106/ - Experienced members are generous enough to share lists of domain names that are available to be registered. Sometimes you will land a gem within the bunch.

4. Most of the questions you may have right now have probably already been asked and answered hundreds of times already (literally) - pretend this forum is a book on an infomercial that you just paid money for and read. You have enough material here to answer almost anything you're thinking of. 95% of the posts/discussions on NP are on the topic of domains.

5. Before registering or buying a domain name, ask yourself this: "Is this domain name worthy enough for me to pay renewal fees on for at least 3 years?" - If it is not worth it to you to renew (at full cost) that domain name for 3 or more years, then you don't even see value in it, do you think someone else will? Remember, there are no 99 cent renewal coupons.

6. When growing your domain portfolio, keep it diversified. When you're new to domain investing, don't register 10 domains on the same topic or niche. If something is trending, buy 1 or 2 domains, not 10 or 20 because they're available. Trends can die quickly in this industry and it's easy to get carried away and find yourself with 30 renewal fees in 12 months on worthless domains or domains that won't have value for years, be prepared for that.

7. When first starting out, focus on flipping domains and not 'holding' them. Flipping means you acquire something and sell it asap for more than what you paid no matter how much more it is and grow from there. 'Holding' is acquiring a domain name and waiting for a much larger offer. Being new, you probably won't have a sense of what will attract that big offer so you may only have domains that can be sold for 1, 2, or 3x's what you paid for it to fellow and more experienced domainers. Once you start learning what consistently sells to other domainers for smaller profits, you'll begin learning what you should be holding onto yourself.

8. When you're thinking about registering or buying a domain name, think about who would want the domain and how much they would be willing to spend on it, this is usually based on how much money they can make with that particular domain. Example: If you come across a domain like CuteCatPictures.com, yes it sounds good, yes, a blog can be made out of it, it can be a site with Cute Cat Pictures, but most of these sites are hobby sites and they don't make serious money. If a website like this which could only generate $xx a month, do you think they're going to pay hundreds or thousands? No, more like $20 or $30. Your *big* sale for a name like this would most likely be low $xxx but that would be luck. Instead, focus on domains you know someone can make good money with. If someone can earn thousands a month operating on that domain, that's when you can expect reasonable offers.

9. Many new investors automatically fall in-love with a domain they own once they receive a $20 or $30 offer on it, they assume this person is making me an offer so it must be worth thousands. It's not. When starting out, sell, sell, sell. There may be a chance that you did let a good domain get away but at the end of the day the experience and knowledge you gained from doing these small deals will help get you to a higher level much more quickly and time is more valuable than money and there are always new opportunities every day.

10: If you're in need of cash flow, then you need to study up on contacting end users because chances are you won't be receiving offers on your names any time soon. If you're not in this for the long-haul (at least a year) then you shouldn't bother at all. I see a lot of people new to domain investing saying "I've had my domains listed on Sedo/GoDaddy/etc for a month and It hasn't sold or gotten any offers!?" - There is no expected time for something to sell. Many of the domain sales you see reported, the owners have held on to those names for years. So again, if you need cash flow quickly, focus on reading up how to contact people to make sales, not wait for them to come to you.

Good luck![/QUOTE

Excellent post. Thank you!
 
0
•••
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back