Unstoppable Domains โ€” Expired Auctions

domain aaaro.com

Spacemail by SpaceshipSpacemail by Spaceship
Watch
Status
Not open for further replies.
Impact
0
Boy, I thought Simon Cowell was hard-nosed, but you guys don't sugar-coat anything in here!! So let's see what you make of this.

Appraisal, please, for the 5 letter, pronounceable, (somewhat), aaaro.com. I also am going to include as a package 5 other aaaro domains; .net, .org, .biz, .us, and .info.

Thanks.
BqikBill
 
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Unstoppable Domains โ€” AI StorefrontUnstoppable Domains โ€” AI Storefront
It isn't pronouncable at all is it? lol

You cannot say that down the radio without having to explain it for 20 minutes so it really isn't that great...

I would say reg fee for this, I have seen far better available for $10 but branded domains are not my area, someone else may see some potential.

Don't waste your money on a package of these is my advice, especially with .biz and .us or .info

If you have to then go for .co.uk as it is stronger than them all put together.
 
0
•••
Reg fee. - one a would have made it a cool quad! :)
 
0
•••
It isn't pronouncable at all is it? lol
You cannot say that down the radio without having to explain it for 20 minutes

Of course it is ... as arrow, and saying "Arrow, Triple A, R, O dot com" doesn't take 20 minutes!

Don't waste your money on a package of these is my advice, especially with .biz and .us or .info

I already own them, and have for years. I'm looking to sell them, not buy them.

If you have to then go for .co.uk as it is stronger than them all put together.

:lol: Uhhh, I'm in the US, and there is NO .co.uk domain here that is worth a dime!

But thanks for your opinion anyway. I did ask for it, after all!

Any others?
 
0
•••
I am a 5L specialist and I can guarantee that you own a domain worth reg fee.
 
0
•••
Triple A Ro? It flunks the radio test because it could be interpreted as a number of things:

Triple A Row dot com
AAARow.com
3ARo.com
3ARow.com
Triple A R O dot com (which is what you want)

Plus I can't see this one being branded. I will have to go reg fee as well.
 
0
•••
To be absolutely honest, this is one of the reasons why I stay away from "repeated character domains" unless it's a dictionary word or lll, llll, nnn or nnnn...

I believe it could be used as acronym but not as a brand in itself. Arrow is a dictionary word and its spelling is known spelling among English speakers in many countries (North America, UK, Australia and NZ aside)...I dont see any orthographic or auditive corelation between the two.
 
Last edited:
0
•••
I thought triple letters were supposed to be worth something? Hey,don't give up,you can turn it into something great,and you just never know when your end user comes out of the blue looking for a domain name you thought wasn't so great!
 
0
•••
I thought triple letters were supposed to be worth something? Hey,don't give up,you can turn it into something great,and you just never know when your end user comes out of the blue looking for a domain name you thought wasn't so great!

Three letter domains are definitely worth something as long as it's coupled with a "good" extension. In the above case, the problem is that the domain contains 5 letters with 3 repeating letters to begin with and the combination of all the letters doesn't mean anything...nor is it pronounceable or catchy.

If the domain was krood.com...even with the O O, the domain would be worth more.

The oo and ee tend to do better in the ears (and in the bank) than aa, ii or uu unless you know an investor from Finland :)
 
Last edited:
0
•••
Sorry, I dont see any value in the this name. You would have to explain how to spell it everytime....
 
0
•••
I thought triple letters were supposed to be worth something? Hey,don't give up,you can turn it into something great,and you just never know when your end user comes out of the blue looking for a domain name you thought wasn't so great!

Don't worry, I won't. I've owned these domains for years, intended for a project that never got off the ground, and I was just curious as to what everyone here thought.

And as alistair80 said, it's quite usable as an acronym. I guess a lot of people on here are from the UK and I don't know how it is there, but here in the US every phone book for every city is full of businesses that have named their businesses AAA-something to try and get listed ahead of everyone else. So an end user that'll pay $x,xxx is out there.

I'll update this thread when it sells. Thanks to everyone for their comments.
 
0
•••
I dont think you will find thread when you sell the names

The only acronym I can find for these letters are....

Auditors Approval And Registration Ordinance

Just so you know, there are 158 AAA??.com combinations available to register as of right now...why do think that is?
 
0
•••
Those people who pay the bucks to get listed in the phonebooks first always end up regretting the decision to buy these domains...

They spend a hell of a lot of money and never EVER get the traffic to show for it.

I can get a simple 2 or 3 word domain in the same niche as them and it will always outrank simply because people type it.

Take ComputerMouse.com as an example, now buy CcomputerMousee.com and I will pay you $100 if you can get it generating more money and more traffic.

Aardvark.com works, Aaardvark.com will be the biggest drain on your mortgage in the world and that is why people pay premiums for great domain names with PROPER spelling...if it is how people search for it it will get a natural boost. That is why insurance.com sold for $35,600,000 amd iinsurance.com is worthless.

I wouldn't even offer registration fee for yours sorry, as it means nothing and cannot be sold on.
 
Last edited:
0
•••
If you are thinking of just the domain,it may be reg fees.But if you brand it it will definately have value to it.It sounds good for a directory:)
 
0
•••
Status
Not open for further replies.
Spaceship
Domain Recover
CatchDoms
NameMaxi - Your Domain Has Buyers
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the pageโ€™s height.
Back