I totally agree,
@twiki, that this is not how a business would name itself. But actually, I purchased it because, as a domainer newbie, this is one of the things that I'm finding more puzzling:
Why generic phrases or words that no business in that line would name themselves keep selling for such big sums?
We can find many examples of this in both 1-word domain sales and 2-word domain sales, and, even sometimes although more rarely, in 3-word domain sales.
Example with one-word domain: whisky.com.
Whisky.com is completely generic and impersonal, and no big whisky company would call themselves or their website like that.
And yet It sold for $3.1 million to one of the largest whiskey companies in the world.
And yet despite selling for that sum, it remains virtually unused (there is still an informational website on that domain similar (or maybe the same) to the website run by Michael Castello, the investor who sold the domain 6 years ago.
And I'm not surprised they haven't used it commercially, because it really doesn't sound good to go to a website simply called "whiskey." It sounds "off brand."
So I'm not surprised they didn't use it, what puzzles me is why people/companies pay such huge sums for such domains just to own them for strategic purposes. If they were really that valuable they would put them to use and make a ton of money out of them.
No big company buys prime real estate on 5th avenue and then leaves if empty. But with super premium domain names, it happens all the time. Maybe because at the end of the day they really aren't that monetizable?
And the same happens with
generic-sounding 2-word domains. I'm sure that if I were as lucky as to possess something like
seldrivingcars.com or
artificialintelligence.com I could sell them for a lot of money. And yet neither of them could be used to name a business. They are too generic. They could be used for informational websites. But most informational websites don't make huge amounts of money. Why those big prices then?
So my open question is: why do
generic-term domains and
generic-phrase domains that are not particularly brandable keep selling for such huge sums?
Is it just some strange type of bubble that has lasted for decades?
I know there are a few exceptions of some of these generic-term/phrase domains that had been used by their buyers in a profitable way, but most of them seem to remain completely unused or at best very marginally monetized.