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analysis Premium Two-Word .COM Domain Sales in 2019

NameSilo
It is not surprising that single words and short acronyms attract most of the attention at the high end of the domain name sales news. For example, voice.com sold for $30 million, and California.com, EKO.com, TM.com and RX.com all above one million dollars in 2019. However, if we look at the NameBio daily market reports, two-word domains are well represented, some days even at or near the top. In this post I look at NameBio-reported two-word 2019 .com sales of $30,000 or more. Those 60 sales comprise about 30% of the total number of .com sales above $30,000 this year. I checked the current use for each of the 60 domain names. About 61% are already in active use in websites or for redirection, while about 15% are listed for sale again. Of the 120 words involved in the 60 sales, only 4 words appeared in two different domain names. The sales represented different types of name transitions, from longer or different names, or in a couple of cases from different extensions. No particular niches dominated the list. More than 70% of the sales were at just three venues.


The Top 2019 Two-Word COM Sales List

Here, in order of sales price, are two-word .com domain name sales of $30,000 or more listed on NameBio so far in 2019. I also include the end-use if known. The link in the title is to the NameBio record which gives the date, price, venue and other information, while the link within the description takes you to an operating site for that domain name, if there is one.
  1. MediData.com This US headquartered global cloud-based medical testing services company, medidata, procured the name from a Swiss company previously operating on the name. The $600,000 private sale was revealed by George Kirikos based on SEC filings.
  2. BettingOdds.com This $487,867 Sedo sale currently just goes to a coming soon page. According to DomainNameWire the buyer is a UK based company named GamingUSA. Yes that is a confusing name for a UK based company! BettingOdds should be a significant improvement.
  3. DomainNames.com This $370,000 sale happened during the live auction at NamesCon 2019. It was an exciting time in the room as the name sold. The domain name currently directs to the Uniregistry site.
  4. JoyRide.com This $300,000 sale was made at Uniregistry. The domain name is in use by the innovative vehicle rental company JoyRide. They facilitate rental of unsold inventory from automobile dealerships.
  5. GreenRoads.com This $160,000 sale, also at Uniregistry, is in use by a CBD Oil products company.GreenRoads. The new domain name currently redirects to their previous site, GreenRoadsWorld.com.
  6. AccidentAttorney.com This $150,000 sale was at GoDaddy. The domain name is in use by a law firm with the initials K&P, and it redirects to KPAttorney.com.
  7. MortgageRefinancing.com This $148,000 sale was made by domain investor Warren Mae. MortgageRefinancing.com is in use by a mortgage refinancing company Freedom Mortgage. It currently redirects to their previous website FreedomMortgage.com.
  8. BestDeals.com This $105,000 sale was completed at Uniregistry. The day I checked there was no operational site at the domain name that sold in August.
  9. SeedMagazine.com This sale just missed the $100,000 mark, closing at $99,501 on GoDaddy. SeedMagazine appears to be a monetized reference site with an emphasis on biotechnology related science and development, although covering topics from public policy, publishing, innovation and other areas.
    The remaining sales are all at less than $85,000 and are listed in decreasing price order. You can see the precise price, date and sales venue through the NameBio link in the title.
  10. AceTech.com Many companies operate under this name, but the new owner of AceTech.com is a global company that provides fleet management software and services for emergency vehicles.
  11. CryptoInsurance.com The site was not operational the day I checked.
  12. LifeForce.com When I checked the site I was taken to a password protected portal with no indication of the type of services offered.
  13. MyWebsite.com This is an interesting sale, as it seems the company is moving from one two-word .com to another of similar length. Currently MyWebsite.com redirects to OwnWebsite.com, a web design and development services company.
  14. FinalGoal.com This name could find use in many areas from strategic or career planning to lifestyle coaching. However, the actual use of FinalGoal is for a football/soccer sports site.
  15. CryptoInsurance.com The site was not operational the day I checked.
  16. FusionBank There was no operational website the day I checked.
  17. RedBarn This is a fairly widely used name. The new owner of RedBarn.com operates a dog and cat food business at the site.
  18. ShoppingCenter.com This valuable generic name currently goes to a for-sale page.
  19. CryptoCart.com This domain name currently goes to a for-sale page.
  20. AppleGreen.com The domain name AppleGreen.com is in use by an Irish chain of food stores and gasoline outlets of the same name. The domain redirects to their previous domain name AppleGreenStores.com. This sale represents an example of moving from a three-word to a much stronger two-word domain name.
  21. InvestingMoney.com The end-use category seems obvious for this great name, but it is not currently operational.
  22. OrbitDownloader.com This is an interesting name, but was not in use the day I checked.
  23. LiveWell.com This could mean many things, but LiveWell.com is used for a personal finance site.
  24. NaviBank.com is currently listed for sale again.
  25. FactoryDirect.com is a versatile name useful for any sort of direct to consumer business. The new owner of FactoryDirect.com, uses it for a craft supplies online store. Previously the business used the domain name FactoryDirectCraft, upgrading to the two-word domain name. Web traffic to the new name currently redirects to the old site.
  26. ComScope.com was not operational on the day I checked.
  27. BusinessFirst.com is currently listed for sale again.
  28. ForSchool.com The new owner of the domain name ForSchool.com is the popular Book Creator business, an app that allows children, and others, to easily create books. Currently the domain name redirects to their previous site BookCreator.com.
  29. PlaceMaker.comThe domain name PlaceMaker.com is active for Website Builder.
  30. HeyMoney.comThe domain name was purchased concurrently with the paired exact new extension name Hey.Money through two separate sales on same day, although the domain names do not currently resolve. DomainNameWire reported that the likely buyer was Advanced Planning Solutions, a US financial services business.
  31. NineMonths.com Interestingly this domain name redirects to a site offering the domain name 9months.com for sale.
  32. FirstDate.com Not surprisingly this is going to be a singles site, but at moment it just says coming soon.
  33. HappyLook.com Currently the new owner uses HappyLook.com to redirect to the AGCapitalFund investment site.
  34. CasinoEngine.com The new owner of the domain name CasinoEngine.com redirects it to a subdomain at their previous site EveryMatrix. The business handles casino integration technology, and the rename gives them a more descriptive name, even though they moved from one two-word domain name to another.
  35. WindEnergy.com is listed for sale again.
  36. MalpracticeCenter.com The new owner of MalpracticeCenter has the site operational as a medical malpractice information site.
  37. DuoBank.com The new owner of DuoBank is a Canadian financial services company. The name duo draws on their idea of partnering with clients.
  38. ProFix.com is listed for sale again.
  39. GoldenState.com This great name could fit various California uses, but it is listed for sale again.
  40. GreenCarpet.com It would appear that an Austrian carpet company plans to rename, but currently GreenCarpet.com redirects to messeteppich.at.
  41. FiveNines.com This interesting name actually sold twice for five-figures during the reporting period, and it is now listed for sale again.
  42. VelvetRope.com The new owners of VelvetRope.com have a subscription based service for influencers to engage with fans.
  43. LoveLetter.com The domain name LoveLetter.com is in use as an online store for gifts. It redirects to a subdomain on iherb.
  44. SEOservice.com The great name SEOservice.com is in use as a blog about SEO. Arguably this perhaps should not be considered a two-word domain name, but I did include it.
  45. ReviewMe.com In what looks like early stages of development, ReviewMe.com is being used for a trusted reviews site.
  46. LinuxGazette.com I bet you think that LinuxGazette.com is a reference site or blog on the Linux operating system. But you would be wrong! It actually redirects to a payday loan site called SwiftMoney!
  47. CoSpaces.com This domain name would suit a co-working space business, but the domain name is listed for sale again.
  48. PharmEasy.com The new owners of PharmEasy.com are redirecting it to their existing online health products site at PharmEasy.in. This is one of two examples in our list where a company migrates from a different extension to the same name in .com
  49. BlueDot.com The new owner of BlueDot.com is the modern furniture and accents store BluDot. They actually redirect it to their site (blu vs blue) BluDot.com. I believe this is the only example in this list of obtaining a second similar name to cover all likely spellings of your name.
  50. TravelAdvantage.com The domain name TravelAdvantage.com is now being used for a private membership travel service.
  51. NorthDakota.com The domain name NorthDakota.com is listed on Efty for lease as a “future home of the US 2020 presidential candidate”. Clearly the name is also well suited to travel and other types of regional reference sites, however.
  52. MaximOnline.com goes to an adult site.
  53. SpreadGroup.com The domain name SpreadGroup.com redirects to an existing site, SpreadShirt.net, that provides team jersey sales.
  54. BuddyTV.com did not go to an operational site the day I checked.
  55. blog-city.com. The new owner of blog-city.com uses it for a foreign language blog about online gaming and casinos. This is the only hyphenated domain in our list.
  56. NovaPay.com This site could not be reached the day I checked.
  57. CommercialSearch.com. The site CommercialSearch.com is a reference site for commercial real estate. The website is currently for sale.
  58. MortgageAdvisors.com This domain name is now listed for sale again.
  59. WealthCare.com This site gave a 404 error the day I checked.
  60. CBDclub.com This domain name is currently parked.

Patterns

I was looking for trends that might lead to actionable insights for domain investors. Here are some reflections, although with such a varied list definitive conclusions are impossible.
  • There were 8 two-word .com sales of $100,000 or more in just under a year, with the highest being $600,000. By comparison, overall there were 51 .com sales over $100,000 during the same period. Therefore two-word sales represented about 16% of the six-figure (or more) .com sales.
  • If we look at sales of $30,000 or more there are 60 two-word .com sales of $30,000 or more up to the time of writing in 2019, compared to 199 overall .com sales during the same period. Therefore two-word sales represented about 30% of the sales of $30,000 or more.
  • Considering that some of the sales were fairly recent, the percentage of domain names in active use is reasonably high at 60% (36 of the 60 sites are active). I counted as active if the site was developed or used for redirection, but not if it had a coming soon message or was listed for sale.
  • It seemed that 9 of the 60 names, about 15%, were listed for sale or lease again.
  • I had hoped to see clear trends in the type of transition. However the list represents different kinds of domain name migration. In several cases a company moves from a three-word domain name to the shorter two-word domain name. One transition was between similar length two-word domain names.
  • In only a few cases was the move from another extension, one from .in and one from .net.
  • Some of these sales represent a rebranding to a new name, while others appear to be relatively new businesses.
  • In a few cases the domain names are being used for monetized reference sites, showing that five-figure sales for that use are possible.
  • The niches represented in the list are varied with finance and investment, followed by direct marketing, among the most common. There were also multiple sales involving health products, cryptocurrencies, and gambling. I had expected more of a concentration in consumer-facing global businesses where the benefits of a descriptive two-word premium name are most obvious.
  • Most of the words appeared in only one sale on the list. A few that appeared multiple times are bank (3), center (2), mortgage (2) and green (2). Far more often a word appeared only once in any of the 60 names, this happening for 111 different words.
  • Colours come into several of the names, with green part of the name twice. and red and blue once each. Some might regard golden as a colour as well.
  • More than 70% of the sales occurred at just three venues: Sedo (22), GoDaddy (13) and Uniregistry (9). However, keep in mind that only a few of the places where those outside the domain industry typically buy domain names report the sales to NameBio.
  • Just one of the sales on the list had a hyphen. Note that I did not count three word names like Gambling-Law-US that did sell during the period.
Keep in mind that only certain venues report to NameBio, so the total number of sales is probably considerably higher. I would roughly estimate that perhaps the total number of two-word .com sales above $30,000 is about four times the number reported here.


Please Share Your Insights

I am sure that more experienced domain investors have many insights on premium two-word .com domain names that we could all learn from. Why not share your thoughts in the replies?
  • Do you see interest in premium two-word .com domain names increasing or decreasing over the years?
  • Are there certain niches or words that you think have particular value for this type of domain name?
  • What is the best way to promote and sell two-word domain names?
  • What fraction of your personal profile is in premium two-word domain names?
  • Which of the names on the list do you think are particularly strong?
  • Are you holding steady, or changing the percentage of your portfolio in premium two-word domain names?
Of course feel free to share anything related to the topic, including personal experiences with two-word .com domain names that sold.
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
FusionBank thebiggest china IT company 's new founded bank ,virtual bank!
 
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The list defiles the mindset of only short names can sell well. I can spot names between 10 to 21letters sell for such high figure. That a huge shift in domaining perspective.

Like I always say, the buyer (end-user) do end up being the best valuator of a domain.

@Bob Hawkes great job here sir
 
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your articles are worth reading. thanks for sharing.
 
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Thank you very much for this article ..

Keep it coming @Bob Hawkes you are an asset to NP
(y)
 
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Congrats, nice name and got a very handsome figure there mate, happy with that :xf.smile:? By the way did you sell it privately, through a broker or an auction? Cheers
Velvetrope.com was a private (inbound) sale. Loveletter.com was a BIN on Afternic and Stairwell.com was via MarkMonitor acquiring it on behalf of a client.
And for what it’s worth, I also acquired Breathcheck.com for client at $20k
 
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There are a few 2 word names from the list I would never though I would want to own it in my portfolio, they are just simply so plain

It all comes down to end users, there is no concrete rules that names fall into such and such will get high return
Velvetrope.com was a private (inbound) sale. Loveletter.com was a BIN on Afternic and Stairwell.com was via MarkMonitor acquiring it on behalf of a client.
And for what it’s worth, I also acquired Breathcheck.com for client at $20k

For velvet rope.com how did you market it?
For loveletter.com how did you price the name? and what types info was it based on?
Any tips for reaching out to the right end users?
How would you educate your client the importance of owning the valuable domain name? Folk out $20k for something which is not tangible is a big thing to most out there?

Appreciated!
 
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There are a few 2 word names from the list I would never though I would want to own them in my portfolio, they are just simply so plain however they did attract a high paid buyer. That made me wonder...

It all comes down to end users, there is no concrete rules that names fall into such and such categories will get high return. If the offer was brought in front of the prospects or potential buyers at the right place, the right time and the right price the deal was considered done. Interested in hearing what you guys think?
 
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This took longer than I anticipated it would (I think a new record for me re the number of active links in any NamePros post - hopefully all operational). I had hoped to see some real dominance in a few keywords, but the list is pretty varied. I also was trying to see if, say, most two words are transitions from other extensions, but that does not seem often the case.

I was surprised so many appear to be for sale again, but that seems to hold in other looks at domain sales. Quite a good percentage are already in active use, almost all with https, considering some of the sales are only a few months old.

If you spot anything wrong please let me know within the edit window. It was easy to miss things as I manually went through all the sites and data. My senior brain is much older than my domains and it sometimes misses things :xf.frown:

Thanks as always to @Michael for the amazing resource that NameBio is (y) to try to obtain domain sales intelligence.

Thanks everyone for reading and responding!

Bob


Pretty knowledgeable and informative post. Good work - hat's off to you Bob!
 
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While vacationing in Santa Marta, Colombia I sold two two-word .Com domains. The 20-character domain (excl TLD) was sold high $xxx while the 17-character domain (excl TLD) was sold mid-xxx. Not spectacular headline-producing sales prices but more typical for brandable keyword combinations which make sense but which do not have any meaningful search volume.
 
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That was a highly informative article and analysis of the premium 2 word .com domain names sold to date in 2019!

Your PATTERNS analysis was particularly insightful and the result of well reasoned analysis.

And you added this proviso:

"Keep in mind that only certain venues report to NameBio, so the total number of sales is probably considerably higher. I would roughly estimate that perhaps the total number of two-word .com sales above $30,000 is about four times the number reported here."

That is so true, so many sales, for whatever of a myriad of reasons, fail to reach the eyes of the domain community.

Appreciate your bringing to light those outstanding sales.

And Bob, will this become an annual end-of-the-year report?

Thanks again Bob!
 
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There are a few 2 word names from the list I would never though I would want to own it in my portfolio, they are just simply so plain

It all comes down to end users, there is no concrete rules that names fall into such and such will get high return


For velvet rope.com how did you market it?
For loveletter.com how did you price the name? and what types info was it based on?
Any tips for reaching out to the right end users?
How would you educate your client the importance of owning the valuable domain name? Folk out $20k for something which is not tangible is a big thing to most out there?

Appreciated!
I don't market my names at all. My sales are all inbound. My pricing is based on what I think a name is worth (based on my experience) either within a specific industry or as a generic word - applicable for anything.
 
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This took longer than I anticipated it would (I think a new record for me re the number of active links in any NamePros post - hopefully all operational). I had hoped to see some real dominance in a few keywords, but the list is pretty varied. I also was trying to see if, say, most two words are transitions from other extensions, but that does not seem often the case.

I was surprised so many appear to be for sale again, but that seems to hold in other looks at domain sales. Quite a good percentage are already in active use, almost all with https, considering some of the sales are only a few months old.

If you spot anything wrong please let me know within the edit window. It was easy to miss things as I manually went through all the sites and data. My senior brain is much older than my domains and it sometimes misses things :xf.frown:

Thanks as always to @Michael for the amazing resource that NameBio is (y) to try to obtain domain sales intelligence.

Thanks everyone for reading and responding!

Bob
#2 on the list, BettingOdds.com that sold for 487K was originally reported by Andrew Allemann of Domain Name Wire as being BeddingOdds.com...note it really was a typo, and before he made the correction I'd already purchased BeddingOdds.com for a whopping $8.50. I'm sure it would have been ill advised by other NP members, but one must remember I'm all about the risk vs.reward factor. Thanks Bob(y)
 
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I don't market my names at all. My sales are all inbound. My pricing is based on what I think a name is worth (based on my experience) either within a specific industry or as a generic word - applicable for anything.

Dude, "inbound sale" are you referring to people who come and knock your door to acquire the name? It's good to hear that you don't have to market your products at all but sale still comes to you, the names must have all been great names i.e. 1 dictionary word or 2,3 letter dot com domains perhaps?

We are not that fortunate enough to get in the game early so our names aren't that demand we all have to market really hard to reach to the right clients. Cheers,
 
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Dude, "inbound sale" are you referring to people who come and knock your door to acquire the name? It's good to hear that you don't have to market your products at all but sale still comes to you, the names must have all been great names i.e. 1 dictionary word or 2,3 letter dot com domains perhaps?

We are not that fortunate enough to get in the game early so our names aren't that demand we all have to market really hard to reach to the right clients. Cheers,
You're soooo...right domain2009. However, things like AI to target potential "end users" are the type of outbound strategies I'm exploring to market my domains. Good Luck(y)
 
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Just regged a good
Three-word name (in my opinion of course). @Bob Hawkes if and when you get time Bob, would it be possible to compile a list of 3 worders that have sold for good money.

Gary
 
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Just regged a good
Three-word name (in my opinion of course). @Bob Hawkes if and when you get time Bob, would it be possible to compile a list of 3 worders that have sold for good money.

Gary
I'm sure you did Laguna, but like they say, "beauty is in the eyes of the beholder". Share it with us if you don't mind, and I'll share the two-word beauty I just hand reg'd and we'll compare. Notice I didn't say compete, but comparison analysis can be a good thing. Thanks(y)
 
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I'm sure you did Laguna, but like they say, "beauty is in the eyes of the beholder". Share it with us if you don't mind, and I'll share the two-word beauty I just hand reg'd and we'll compare. Notice I didn't say compete, but comparison analysis can be a good thing. Thanks(y)
Not sure this is the thread to promote my names. But I just added it to the thread "reg of the day"
 
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Not sure this is the thread to promote my names. But I just added it to the thread "reg of the day"
I'll share mine their too. Thanks
 
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DomainNames.com This $370,000 sale happened during the live auction at NamesCon 2019. It was an exciting time in the room as the name sold. The domain name currently directs to
I think the actual sale for this name was $500,000 at the NamesCon. The highest bid which was submitted by Uniregistry CEO.
 
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