IT.COM

advice 21 tips for selecting/getting .com domains. (Beginner advice, part #2)

Spaceship Spaceship
Watch

twiki

Top Member
Impact
30,417
I've decided to write yet another post (2nd) with some tips for domain beginners. This time focusing on selecting .com domains. But first I need to add some context as well.

Why .com: I have addressed this in previous post, but shortly: As a beginner your best bet is to deal with coms only, until you gain experience. Chances are you will get weak or crappy domains at first; in fact that is almost guaranteed. Well if they are .coms chances are also you will be able to sell them later and recover your investment.

Important: Listening to this advice (stick to com only) has saved me a lot of investment, first year in domaining and probably my whole domaining career itself.

I need to also mention that I'm primarily a 2-word .com domainer, although I hold a ton of other tlds' as well in both 1 word and 2 word. This is to understand better where I come from. Mostly meaningful domains, sometimes with a brand-ish touch but not necessarily brandables. I dont' sell on brandables marketplaces - but feel free to do so if you want.

Now to the point, here are the tips in no special order:

1) Finding drops and hand regs: expireddomains.net is great for this, although I use my own tools nowadays instead. But have used this site long time and many still do - no problem with that. However I wouldn't personally add anything to the watchlist. It's simply that I don't trust anyone else with my data, what I plan to get.

Hand regs: I stil create, invent, brainstorm domains on a regular basis. Due to having experience, they're rather good and sell quick. But I don't register a ton. The most I ever got were about 50 at a time, after filtering many thousands of intermediary results, or perhaps even more.

You can/should always use Namebio to search for prices for words that are included in your domain. There must be a paying niche for those words. However do your due diligence. Just if a word is sold often, it doesn't mean your combination will also sell.

2) Length. I focus on domains from 7 to 12 letters mostly. These sell fastest. 6 letters is often too short to be a quality domain. Longer domains do sell well however if the combination is very good. I have however found that anything up to 17 characters in length is also good if it makes a ton of sense.

3) Words 1 and 2. You have to always be careful which words you select. A good 2-word .com must include: a) a "niche" word, and b) a "quality" word.

Example: FreeCheese.com is a valid domain (cheese being the niche). RapidFast = not really a good one. Sometimes these weirdos sell (esp. if they sound brandable) but overall you need to stay out of those.

4) For the niche word, I always look at hot/high value or established niches. Crypto for example is a hot + high value niche.

Other example, I also sell "survivor" domains for good money (say SuperSurvivor .com, fictious example); well this is NOT a hot niche, but an established one. It has their fans. Established niches sell less often, but they are sometimes safe bets as they do not tend to disappear quickly. You pick your own side in this regard.

5) For the quality word, stick to the singular and no modifiers. PerfectCrypto is perfect. PerfectioningCrypto, not so much. You get the drill.

6) Always think if it is, perhaps, the reverse combo. CheeseFree is by far not as good as FreeCheese. They sell sometimes, but for far less money.

I never buy or register reversed domains, unless I somehow missed that by accident.

7) Think of this: Does this sound like a business name? If not, drop the idea of getting that domain.

Ask yourself, would I name my own business like this? And the answer should be a big YES; if not, drop that domain right away.

8) 3-words: My advice is, don't. I have a few of them but I don't recommend them, unless the combo is VERY good and you are willing to sell them for cheap so you dont' risk renewals.

Currently not getting any 3-words whatsoever and no plans to do that in the future personally.

9) Invented single words: risky business. Leave this for later. Cryptonificationists.com - I wouldn't, although some very weird names do sell. Sometimes. Mostly not.

10) Dashes and numbers: Nay. Really, nay. They sell sometimes, but the thing is, sales ratio drops a lot below 1% so... overall you lose money with these. Domaining is indeed a numbers game.

11) Buying domains: Well don't head directly to DropCatch cause chances are you're going to deplete your budget fast and buy overpriced domains. Here are some places where you can buy good domains for cheap:

a) NamePros. Great domains are often sold here at wholesale (low) prices. I often buy and sell stuff here myself.

b) NameLiquidate.com. Prices drop to $9 and if you are constantly checking, you can get some goodies.

c) GD closeouts. Not what it used to be, but you can find some xxx range domains there. Not my favorite but I do buy from there sort of regularly, depending of what's in stock.

d) GD auctions. You'd be surprised to find out what you can buy often for $100 or less. I basically sold out each domain I got below $100 at auctions, and rather quick. I suspect some dudes might have also missed the end of auction and they come back to you to get the domain for 2x or 3x the price as a quick flip. Do your due diligence though. And don't get heated and don't overspend. You'll get a better name for cheap next time instead.

12) Reg suggest tools - there are a ton of free and paid tools in this line out there, pick some. Sometimes suggestions are good.

WHOIS availability checks: One bit of advice though, don't use major registrar bulk whois search cause with many of them this might result in your domain being snatched by someone else at the same registrar (yeah, happened to me several times). This is called frontrunning and is still a wildly active problem.

Rather use a good paid service for this.

Estibot is good, never had frontrunning issues with them while I used them. But there are others as well. Again do your due dilligence.

13) Don't reg on impulse, or you'll get crap. I use to keep my reg list for 12 hours at least, and get back to it a couple times. Each time I delete more from the list cause I see other angles and why those are not good. Result is, I take only the cherry on the pie. Always aim for that.

14) Quality - never quantity.

15) Venues: I sell on Afternic, Sedo and park with Dan. You can park with Afternic or Sedo instead - that's fine, whatever brings you best results. Test, test test.

16) Tweaking prices. I tweak prices a lot. Weekly, and sometimes even daily, Sometimes I sell for cheaper, but each sale brings valuable information that I can use to finetune future sales.

17) Retail vs market price: If you have solid budget, sticking to full price (say 3k) is good. If not, prices like 499 or 750 or whatever might be your best ones, as you will sell faster and keep cashflow afloat.

18) Negative conotation - your domain for example does it has negative conotation? Speak them out loud. Does it sound like something else, perhaps even dubious at times? I would not register SneakyBankers for example. Not a good business name.

19) Radio test/grandma test - if you tell the domain to your grandma, she should be able to write it down correctly. If that doesn't happen, you have a problem right there. "Fozzy" is not "fuzzy", people will type fuzzy and never reach that domain. For such reasons domains don't sell cause buyers most often see that. Buyers are the best critics out there.

20) No calls needed. Domains sell without you talking to them buyers. Don't worry about that. If domain is good and price is right, they'll hit the BIN or send you a decent offer. Unless you do outbound, which is just fine. I don't do outbound.

21) Use tld-list.com to see which registrars have the best .com offers and also watch the coupons and offers section on Namepros as well. This will save you a ton of money.

As a final note, there are a ton of great domains expiring daily. Many are missed for hours. I only get some goodies here and there but I see a ton of valuable domains still available even 1 hour after they dropped. They might be below my threshold but I know money can be made on them.

And you don't necessarily need to backorder. You can save a ton of money if you simply wait for it to drop. If DropCatch gets it, well, in most cases you might be overbid anyway so you haven't lost anything, really. Most regular registrar backorders are slow so a quick hand reg might do a better, and cheaper job. Some backorders trigger hours after drop time has ended.

Stuff still available after drop: Also no experienced domainer has supercow powers so we all will be missing/skipping some very good domains since we are all different and aiming for different thing. So there's always a LOT left.

Your expireddomains.net account is a good source for those. These are often better and far cheaper than clouseouts and you can pick similar and even better domains at drop. Oh, I sometimes get domains that have expired 3 months ago and they sell quick. Reason is - I see the value there but other missed on that. So there's always hidden opportunity.

Good luck!
 
Last edited:
104
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Thanks Twiki.. This is gold...
Thanks for your contribution..
 
1
•••
Great article @twiki
thanks for sharing your insights.
as a newbee this was very helpful
 
0
•••
This is an eye opener. Thanks
 
1
•••
Very nice and helpful post, thanks for sharing
 
1
•••
I read "21 tops" at first glance.
 
0
•••
I've decided to write yet another post (2nd) with some tips for domain beginners. This time focusing on selecting .com domains. But first I need to add some context as well.

Why .com: I have addressed this in previous post, but shortly: As a beginner your best bet is to deal with coms only, until you gain experience. Chances are you will get weak or crappy domains at first; in fact that is almost guaranteed. Well if they are .coms chances are also you will be able to sell them later and recover your investment.

Important: Listening to this advice (stick to com only) has saved me a lot of investment, first year in domaining and probably my whole domaining career itself.

I need to also mention that I'm primarily a 2-word .com domainer, although I hold a ton of other tlds' as well in both 1 word and 2 word. This is to understand better where I come from. Mostly meaningful domains, sometimes with a brand-ish touch but not necessarily brandables. I dont' sell on brandables marketplaces - but feel free to do so if you want.

Now to the point, here are the tips in no special order:

1) Finding drops and hand regs: expireddomains.net is great for this, although I use my own tools nowadays instead. But have used this site long time and many still do - no problem with that. However I wouldn't personally add anything to the watchlist. It's simply that I don't trust anyone else with my data, what I plan to get.

Hand regs: I stil create, invent, brainstorm domains on a regular basis. Due to having experience, they're rather good and sell quick. But I don't register a ton. The most I ever got were about 50 at a time, after filtering many thousands of intermediary results, or perhaps even more.

You can/should always use Namebio to search for prices for words that are included in your domain. There must be a paying niche for those words. However do your due diligence. Just if a word is sold often, it doesn't mean your combination will also sell.

2) Length. I focus on domains from 7 to 12 letters mostly. These sell fastest. 6 letters is often too short to be a quality domain. Longer domains do sell well however if the combination is very good. I have however found that anything up to 17 characters in length is also good if it makes a ton of sense.

3) Words 1 and 2. You have to always be careful which words you select. A good 2-word .com must include: a) a "niche" word, and b) a "quality" word.

Example: FreeCheese.com is a valid domain (cheese being the niche). RapidFast = not really a good one. Sometimes these weirdos sell (esp. if they sound brandable) but overall you need to stay out of those.

4) For the niche word, I always look at hot/high value or established niches. Crypto for example is a hot + high value niche.

Other example, I also sell "survivor" domains for good money (say SuperSurvivor .com, fictious example); well this is NOT a hot niche, but an established one. It has their fans. Established niches sell less often, but they are sometimes safe bets as they do not tend to disappear quickly. You pick your own side in this regard.

5) For the quality word, stick to the singular and no modifiers. PerfectCrypto is perfect. PerfectioningCrypto, not so much. You get the drill.

6) Always think if it is, perhaps, the reverse combo. CheeseFree is by far not as good as FreeCheese. They sell sometimes, but for far less money.

I never buy or register reversed domains, unless I somehow missed that by accident.

7) Think of this: Does this sound like a business name? If not, drop the idea of getting that domain.

Ask yourself, would I name my own business like this? And the answer should be a big YES; if not, drop that domain right away.

8) 3-words: My advice is, don't. I have a few of them but I don't recommend them, unless the combo is VERY good and you are willing to sell them for cheap so you dont' risk renewals.

Currently not getting any 3-words whatsoever and no plans to do that in the future personally.

9) Invented single words: risky business. Leave this for later. Cryptonificationists.com - I wouldn't, although some very weird names do sell. Sometimes. Mostly not.

10) Dashes and numbers: Nay. Really, nay. They sell sometimes, but the thing is, sales ratio drops a lot below 1% so... overall you lose money with these. Domaining is indeed a numbers game.

11) Buying domains: Well don't head directly to DropCatch cause chances are you're going to deplete your budget fast and buy overpriced domains. Here are some places where you can buy good domains for cheap:

a) NamePros. Great domains are often sold here at wholesale (low) prices. I often buy and sell stuff here myself.

b) NameLiquidate.com. Prices drop to $9 and if you are constantly checking, you can get some goodies.

c) GD closeouts. Not what it used to be, but you can find some xxx range domains there. Not my favorite but I do buy from there sort of regularly, depending of what's in stock.

d) GD auctions. You'd be surprised to find out what you can buy often for $100 or less. I basically sold out each domain I got below $100 at auctions, and rather quick. I suspect some dudes might have also missed the end of auction and they come back to you to get the domain for 2x or 3x the price as a quick flip. Do your due diligence though. And don't get heated and don't overspend. You'll get a better name for cheap next time instead.

12) Reg suggest tools - there are a ton of free and paid tools in this line out there, pick some. Sometimes suggestions are good.

WHOIS availability checks: One bit of advice though, don't use major registrar bulk whois search cause with many of them this might result in your domain being snatched by someone else at the same registrar (yeah, happened to me several times). This is called frontrunning and is still a wildly active problem.

Rather use a good paid service for this.

Estibot is good, never had frontrunning issues with them while I used them. But there are others as well. Again do your due dilligence.

13) Don't reg on impulse, or you'll get crap. I use to keep my reg list for 12 hours at least, and get back to it a couple times. Each time I delete more from the list cause I see other angles and why those are not good. Result is, I take only the cherry on the pie. Always aim for that.

14) Quality - never quantity.

15) Venues: I sell on Afternic, Sedo and park with Dan. You can park with Afternic or Sedo instead - that's fine, whatever brings you best results. Test, test test.

16) Tweaking prices. I tweak prices a lot. Weekly, and sometimes even daily, Sometimes I sell for cheaper, but each sale brings valuable information that I can use to finetune future sales.

17) Retail vs market price: If you have solid budget, sticking to full price (say 3k) is good. If not, prices like 499 or 750 or whatever might be your best ones, as you will sell faster and keep cashflow afloat.

18) Negative conotation - your domain for example does it has negative conotation? Speak them out loud. Does it sound like something else, perhaps even dubious at times? I would not register SneakyBankers for example. Not a good business name.

19) Radio test/grandma test - if you tell the domain to your grandma, she should be able to write it down correctly. If that doesn't happen, you have a problem right there. "Fozzy" is not "fuzzy", people will type fuzzy and never reach that domain. For such reasons domains don't sell cause buyers most often see that. Buyers are the best critics out there.

20) No calls needed. Domains sell without you talking to them buyers. Don't worry about that. If domain is good and price is right, they'll hit the BIN or send you a decent offer. Unless you do outbound, which is just fine. I don't do outbound.

21) Use tld-list.com to see which registrars have the best .com offers and also watch the coupons and offers section on Namepros as well. This will save you a ton of money.

As a final note, there are a ton of great domains expiring daily. Many are missed for hours. I only get some goodies here and there but I see a ton of valuable domains still available even 1 hour after they dropped. They might be below my threshold but I know money can be made on them.

And you don't necessarily need to backorder. You can save a ton of money if you simply wait for it to drop. If DropCatch gets it, well, in most cases you might be overbid anyway so you haven't lost anything, really. Most regular registrar backorders are slow so a quick hand reg might do a better, and cheaper job. Some backorders trigger hours after drop time has ended.

Stuff still available after drop: Also no experienced domainer has supercow powers so we all will be missing/skipping some very good domains since we are all different and aiming for different thing. So there's always a LOT left.

Your expireddomains.net account is a good source for those. These are often better and far cheaper than clouseouts and you can pick similar and even better domains at drop. Oh, I sometimes get domains that have expired 3 months ago and they sell quick. Reason is - I see the value there but other missed on that. So there's always hidden opportunity.

Good luck!

Thanks for sharing valuable thoughts...
Coincidentally i have mytwiki.com for sale !
 
1
•••
1
•••
Great guide @twiki !
Lots of questions are answered whit this post!
 
1
•••
I've decided to write yet another post (2nd) with some tips for domain beginners. This time focusing on selecting .com domains. But first I need to add some context as well.

Why .com: I have addressed this in previous post, but shortly: As a beginner your best bet is to deal with coms only, until you gain experience. Chances are you will get weak or crappy domains at first; in fact that is almost guaranteed. Well if they are .coms chances are also you will be able to sell them later and recover your investment.

Important: Listening to this advice (stick to com only) has saved me a lot of investment, first year in domaining and probably my whole domaining career itself.

I need to also mention that I'm primarily a 2-word .com domainer, although I hold a ton of other tlds' as well in both 1 word and 2 word. This is to understand better where I come from. Mostly meaningful domains, sometimes with a brand-ish touch but not necessarily brandables. I dont' sell on brandables marketplaces - but feel free to do so if you want.

Now to the point, here are the tips in no special order:

1) Finding drops and hand regs: expireddomains.net is great for this, although I use my own tools nowadays instead. But have used this site long time and many still do - no problem with that. However I wouldn't personally add anything to the watchlist. It's simply that I don't trust anyone else with my data, what I plan to get.

Hand regs: I stil create, invent, brainstorm domains on a regular basis. Due to having experience, they're rather good and sell quick. But I don't register a ton. The most I ever got were about 50 at a time, after filtering many thousands of intermediary results, or perhaps even more.

You can/should always use Namebio to search for prices for words that are included in your domain. There must be a paying niche for those words. However do your due diligence. Just if a word is sold often, it doesn't mean your combination will also sell.

2) Length. I focus on domains from 7 to 12 letters mostly. These sell fastest. 6 letters is often too short to be a quality domain. Longer domains do sell well however if the combination is very good. I have however found that anything up to 17 characters in length is also good if it makes a ton of sense.

3) Words 1 and 2. You have to always be careful which words you select. A good 2-word .com must include: a) a "niche" word, and b) a "quality" word.

Example: FreeCheese.com is a valid domain (cheese being the niche). RapidFast = not really a good one. Sometimes these weirdos sell (esp. if they sound brandable) but overall you need to stay out of those.

4) For the niche word, I always look at hot/high value or established niches. Crypto for example is a hot + high value niche.

Other example, I also sell "survivor" domains for good money (say SuperSurvivor .com, fictious example); well this is NOT a hot niche, but an established one. It has their fans. Established niches sell less often, but they are sometimes safe bets as they do not tend to disappear quickly. You pick your own side in this regard.

5) For the quality word, stick to the singular and no modifiers. PerfectCrypto is perfect. PerfectioningCrypto, not so much. You get the drill.

6) Always think if it is, perhaps, the reverse combo. CheeseFree is by far not as good as FreeCheese. They sell sometimes, but for far less money.

I never buy or register reversed domains, unless I somehow missed that by accident.

7) Think of this: Does this sound like a business name? If not, drop the idea of getting that domain.

Ask yourself, would I name my own business like this? And the answer should be a big YES; if not, drop that domain right away.

8) 3-words: My advice is, don't. I have a few of them but I don't recommend them, unless the combo is VERY good and you are willing to sell them for cheap so you dont' risk renewals.

Currently not getting any 3-words whatsoever and no plans to do that in the future personally.

9) Invented single words: risky business. Leave this for later. Cryptonificationists.com - I wouldn't, although some very weird names do sell. Sometimes. Mostly not.

10) Dashes and numbers: Nay. Really, nay. They sell sometimes, but the thing is, sales ratio drops a lot below 1% so... overall you lose money with these. Domaining is indeed a numbers game.

11) Buying domains: Well don't head directly to DropCatch cause chances are you're going to deplete your budget fast and buy overpriced domains. Here are some places where you can buy good domains for cheap:

a) NamePros. Great domains are often sold here at wholesale (low) prices. I often buy and sell stuff here myself.

b) NameLiquidate.com. Prices drop to $9 and if you are constantly checking, you can get some goodies.

c) GD closeouts. Not what it used to be, but you can find some xxx range domains there. Not my favorite but I do buy from there sort of regularly, depending of what's in stock.

d) GD auctions. You'd be surprised to find out what you can buy often for $100 or less. I basically sold out each domain I got below $100 at auctions, and rather quick. I suspect some dudes might have also missed the end of auction and they come back to you to get the domain for 2x or 3x the price as a quick flip. Do your due diligence though. And don't get heated and don't overspend. You'll get a better name for cheap next time instead.

12) Reg suggest tools - there are a ton of free and paid tools in this line out there, pick some. Sometimes suggestions are good.

WHOIS availability checks: One bit of advice though, don't use major registrar bulk whois search cause with many of them this might result in your domain being snatched by someone else at the same registrar (yeah, happened to me several times). This is called frontrunning and is still a wildly active problem.

Rather use a good paid service for this.

Estibot is good, never had frontrunning issues with them while I used them. But there are others as well. Again do your due dilligence.

13) Don't reg on impulse, or you'll get crap. I use to keep my reg list for 12 hours at least, and get back to it a couple times. Each time I delete more from the list cause I see other angles and why those are not good. Result is, I take only the cherry on the pie. Always aim for that.

14) Quality - never quantity.

15) Venues: I sell on Afternic, Sedo and park with Dan. You can park with Afternic or Sedo instead - that's fine, whatever brings you best results. Test, test test.

16) Tweaking prices. I tweak prices a lot. Weekly, and sometimes even daily, Sometimes I sell for cheaper, but each sale brings valuable information that I can use to finetune future sales.

17) Retail vs market price: If you have solid budget, sticking to full price (say 3k) is good. If not, prices like 499 or 750 or whatever might be your best ones, as you will sell faster and keep cashflow afloat.

18) Negative conotation - your domain for example does it has negative conotation? Speak them out loud. Does it sound like something else, perhaps even dubious at times? I would not register SneakyBankers for example. Not a good business name.

19) Radio test/grandma test - if you tell the domain to your grandma, she should be able to write it down correctly. If that doesn't happen, you have a problem right there. "Fozzy" is not "fuzzy", people will type fuzzy and never reach that domain. For such reasons domains don't sell cause buyers most often see that. Buyers are the best critics out there.

20) No calls needed. Domains sell without you talking to them buyers. Don't worry about that. If domain is good and price is right, they'll hit the BIN or send you a decent offer. Unless you do outbound, which is just fine. I don't do outbound.

21) Use tld-list.com to see which registrars have the best .com offers and also watch the coupons and offers section on Namepros as well. This will save you a ton of money.

As a final note, there are a ton of great domains expiring daily. Many are missed for hours. I only get some goodies here and there but I see a ton of valuable domains still available even 1 hour after they dropped. They might be below my threshold but I know money can be made on them.

And you don't necessarily need to backorder. You can save a ton of money if you simply wait for it to drop. If DropCatch gets it, well, in most cases you might be overbid anyway so you haven't lost anything, really. Most regular registrar backorders are slow so a quick hand reg might do a better, and cheaper job. Some backorders trigger hours after drop time has ended.

Stuff still available after drop: Also no experienced domainer has supercow powers so we all will be missing/skipping some very good domains since we are all different and aiming for different thing. So there's always a LOT left.

Your expireddomains.net account is a good source for those. These are often better and far cheaper than clouseouts and you can pick similar and even better domains at drop. Oh, I sometimes get domains that have expired 3 months ago and they sell quick. Reason is - I see the value there but other missed on that. So there's always hidden opportunity.

Good luck!
This is really fantastic
 
1
•••
I'm humbled, inspired and frightened. What started as fun, may have become an addiction.

I just started buying domains one day after a heartbreaking lost job opportunity with a crypto start up. I was hired on spot by a music client and recently met friend. They were so impressed by my work and problem solving ability they asked me to be their operations manager. I didn't know anything about crypto, but they said to trust and I would learn on site. I was strategically let go of the moment they found a major player reputable replacement. With the promise of being a millionaire in 1.5 yrs (and they are tracking on sched) to having nothing, I was beyond broken. I made the mistake of trusting and even sharing with my wife and daughters that "WE MADE IT!"

Domain names have been a healing therapy for me. It's allowed me to envision a future with hope and humor. I've always been the guy everyone turns to for good ideas and domains add that extra money where your mouth is test. If the ideas original the domain should be available. if I think it's good buy it.

Well, 450 domains later and gradually discovering all the shared wisdom on the web, I may have really ^%$ked up. I've just been so depressed and domains make me happy. Reminds me of playing D&D when I was a kid. Only D&D was free.

This thread made me tear up because reality has set in and this is the first time I've had someone really lay it down "do's and dont's" with the intension of actually helping a newster. So thank you. And I'm shocked as this is the first time I've ever shared on a thread. So thank you @twiki you broke the curse.

On my own I concluded to park at DAN and post on GD. Namecheap is my reg. I knew nothing about DNS or txt records, etc... This has been a new adventure. Unfortunately I didn't start by reading all the wisdom and thinking of it as therapy is no longer an option. I need to step up, own up and feed my family.

I feel like I need to share my portfolio and get some advice, but I'm aware no one can figure out for me. I've been through it in the music industry and had jaded ex-stars s%it all over songs that became hits.
 
3
•••
I'm humbled, inspired and frightened. What started as fun, may have become an addiction.

I just started buying domains one day after a heartbreaking lost job opportunity with a crypto start up. I was hired on spot by a music client and recently met friend. They were so impressed by my work and problem solving ability they asked me to be their operations manager. I didn't know anything about crypto, but they said to trust and I would learn on site. I was strategically let go of the moment they found a major player reputable replacement. With the promise of being a millionaire in 1.5 yrs (and they are tracking on sched) to having nothing, I was beyond broken. I made the mistake of trusting and even sharing with my wife and daughters that "WE MADE IT!"

Domain names have been a healing therapy for me. It's allowed me to envision a future with hope and humor. I've always been the guy everyone turns to for good ideas and domains add that extra money where your mouth is test. If the ideas original the domain should be available. if I think it's good buy it.

Well, 450 domains later and gradually discovering all the shared wisdom on the web, I may have really ^%$ked up. I've just been so depressed and domains make me happy. Reminds me of playing D&D when I was a kid. Only D&D was free.

This thread made me tear up because reality has set in and this is the first time I've had someone really lay it down "do's and dont's" with the intension of actually helping a newster. So thank you. And I'm shocked as this is the first time I've ever shared on a thread. So thank you @twiki you broke the curse.

On my own I concluded to park at DAN and post on GD. Namecheap is my reg. I knew nothing about DNS or txt records, etc... This has been a new adventure. Unfortunately I didn't start by reading all the wisdom and thinking of it as therapy is no longer an option. I need to step up, own up and feed my family.

I feel like I need to share my portfolio and get some advice, but I'm aware no one can figure out for me. I've been through it in the music industry and had jaded ex-stars s%it all over songs that became hits.

Glad my post has touched something deeper in your case.

Well since you started on this path, now it's probably time to perfect your skills. Which BTW it's a never-ending journey with domains, which also makes it highly interesting and a bit addictive.

Get insight from other members by posting some stuff, not the whole portfolio but some sample. However indeed you need to make your own path. If you make NP your daily visit place, in time you will get there because everything you need to succeed in domaining, in terms of information is already available here.

Good luck!
 
2
•••
I'm humbled, inspired and frightened. What started as fun, may have become an addiction.

I just started buying domains one day after a heartbreaking lost job opportunity with a crypto start up. I was hired on spot by a music client and recently met friend. They were so impressed by my work and problem solving ability they asked me to be their operations manager. I didn't know anything about crypto, but they said to trust and I would learn on site. I was strategically let go of the moment they found a major player reputable replacement. With the promise of being a millionaire in 1.5 yrs (and they are tracking on sched) to having nothing, I was beyond broken. I made the mistake of trusting and even sharing with my wife and daughters that "WE MADE IT!"

Domain names have been a healing therapy for me. It's allowed me to envision a future with hope and humor. I've always been the guy everyone turns to for good ideas and domains add that extra money where your mouth is test. If the ideas original the domain should be available. if I think it's good buy it.

Well, 450 domains later and gradually discovering all the shared wisdom on the web, I may have really ^%$ked up. I've just been so depressed and domains make me happy. Reminds me of playing D&D when I was a kid. Only D&D was free.

This thread made me tear up because reality has set in and this is the first time I've had someone really lay it down "do's and dont's" with the intension of actually helping a newster. So thank you. And I'm shocked as this is the first time I've ever shared on a thread. So thank you @twiki you broke the curse.

On my own I concluded to park at DAN and post on GD. Namecheap is my reg. I knew nothing about DNS or txt records, etc... This has been a new adventure. Unfortunately I didn't start by reading all the wisdom and thinking of it as therapy is no longer an option. I need to step up, own up and feed my family.

I feel like I need to share my portfolio and get some advice, but I'm aware no one can figure out for me. I've been through it in the music industry and had jaded ex-stars s%it all over songs that became hits.
NameUnite....i've been at this domain game for almost four years now, but don't need to rely on it to make a living. If you're interested in talking with someone who has a lot of practical business experience and believes there's a better/smarter path to success just ask and I'll be more than happy to share.

You can reach me via my "information" link here on NP, or just send me a PM. Good Luck!
 
0
•••
Glad my post has touched something deeper in your case.

Well since you started on this path, now it's probably time to perfect your skills. Which BTW it's a never-ending journey with domains, which also makes it highly interesting and a bit addictive.

Get insight from other members by posting some stuff, not the whole portfolio but some sample. However indeed you need to make your own path. If you make NP your daily visit place, in time you will get there because everything you need to succeed in domaining, in terms of information is already available here.

Good luck!
Wow, I think I picked the right community to join. I like "daily visit place" and "not whole portfolio." Good advice. Will do
 
1
•••
NameUnite....i've been at this domain game for almost four years now, but don't need to rely on it to make a living. If you're interested in talking with someone who has a lot of practical business experience and believes there's a better/smarter path to success just ask and I'll be more than happy to share.

You can reach me via my "information" link here on NP, or just send me a PM. Good Luck!

Good point "better/smarter path to success" yes I will reach out. I would love to see a bigger picture where domains play a role or more diverse role.

I'm also curious about the possibilities of domain and blockchain and would love to talk with NFT or Defi pioneer and listen to their vision.
 
0
•••
"Get insight from other members by posting some stuff, not the whole portfolio but some sample."

@twiki or anyone I have two questions:.

1) Where is the appropriate place to share names for feedback and whats best format? Recommend I start a new thread, post here or other place?

2) I have an idea, but what are benefits to not typing actual domain url but instead sharing domain name with extra spaces or characters to avoid listing actual address? Examples - "anyname .com" or "anymame (com)" and so forth. Thank You
 
1
•••
"Get insight from other members by posting some stuff, not the whole portfolio but some sample."

@twiki or anyone I have two questions:.

1) Where is the appropriate place to share names for feedback and whats best format? Recommend I start a new thread, post here or other place?

2) I have an idea, but what are benefits to not typing actual domain url but instead sharing domain name with extra spaces or characters to avoid listing actual address? Examples - "anyname .com" or "anymame (com)" and so forth. Thank You

You can find the domain appraisal section at the following location. You may group some domains in one posting for convenience.

https://www.namepros.com/forums/domain-appraisal.3/

The reason for masking domains on namePros is to avoid indexing by search engines like Google. In the pre-sales phase, end-users will see that you are offering your domain at a steep discount on this forum, while listing them for end-user prices elsewhere. In the negotiation phase, you give insights into your negotiation strategy. In the post-sale phase, buyers may not appreciate that you mention their new brand with details such as sales price.
 
Last edited:
1
•••
The reason for masking domains on namePros is to avoid indexing by search engines like Google. In the pre-sales phase, end-users will see that you are offering your domain at a steep discount on this forum, while listing them for end-user prices elsewhere. In the negotiation phase, you give insights into your negotiation strategy. In the post-sale phase, buyers may not appreciate that you mention their new brand with details such as sales price,

@Future Sensors Thank you. Well said.
 
2
•••
Than you a lot for this valuable information.
 
1
•••
Great post as usually @twiki

Please, there's this post you made about why a domain name may still be available. I thought I saved it to read offline but it turns out I didn't and I can't seem to find it on namepros either?

If you can, please help me the link to the post. Thanks.
 
1
•••
1
•••
It's an amazing thread, I have noted some points.

Thanks for the thread
 
0
•••
.COM IS KING
Using an alternate domain extension makes it hard for your customers to find you. It can
also be expensive to acquire the .com after your business has grown.
 
0
•••
Thank you for this valuable post.. My first domain i ever sold I initially got greedy and overpriced it. But after going through some threads here and throwing away my greed in the gutter I began to see things clearly and reduced the price and the domain was sold at 250usd..

Thank you once more
 
1
•••
Some great information here, I don't see anything wrong with outbound sales but it depends on the name. Some names will have value to certain companies or buyers but no harm in putting out feelers. Invented words you need to be careful with. It needs to sound like a real word or have a real word meshed with something catchy imo. Definitely a dangerous game for a newbie.
 
0
•••
This was decent info but come on now, don't tell beginners to go to GD, that's cruel.

Also,
What?
I don't disagree on the obsession with domain shortness. Amazon would have been too long for some of the 5 letters or less evangelists. Really 5 letters imo unless it's ultra premium like car or bet hard to make a domain that makes sense that is shorter.
 
0
•••
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back