TellabAmine
New Member
- Impact
- 2
Hey NamePros,
I kept buying expired names then struggling to sell them. I had no proof real buyers existed. So I built DNLeads to fix that.
What it does
Enter any domain. It finds businesses stuck on weaker names in the same niche. These companies wanted your keyword but settled for less. That is proven demand.
Example: you search CloudHosting.com. It does not just add prefixes or suffixes. It understands the niche and swaps keywords with related ones. So it finds names like HostingCloud.co, BestCloud.net, WebHost.io, ServerCloud.org. It finds businesses using different word orders and related terms, not just cloudhosting with something stuck on the front or back.
Why this matters
Other tools find similar looking domains. DNLeads finds businesses that would see your domain as a real upgrade. That is buying intent you can count on.
What you get back
Each lead is checked for:
What works best
Two word exact match dot coms are the sweet spot. Names like RoofRepair.com or WebDesign.com produce the most leads because there are many businesses on weaker versions.
Three word names work too. Brandables and made up words do not work. There is no keyword ecosystem to scan.
Machine learning layer
DNLeads also uses machine learning to understand the keyword ecosystem around your domain. It looks at related terms, word order, niche patterns, and business signals. So it is not just matching similar domains. It learns which companies are more likely to see your domain as a real upgrade.
That helps surface stronger leads and score them by actual upgrade intent, not just keyword similarity.
My question
How do you currently check if an expired name has real buyers before you buy? Do you search Google? Check past sales? Go with instinct?
I used to guess. Now I run a quick search first. If I see active businesses on weaker names, I buy with confidence. If it is dead, I pass.
Try it free at DNLeads.co. Happy to answer questions or hear what would make it better for your workflow.
I kept buying expired names then struggling to sell them. I had no proof real buyers existed. So I built DNLeads to fix that.
What it does
Enter any domain. It finds businesses stuck on weaker names in the same niche. These companies wanted your keyword but settled for less. That is proven demand.
Example: you search CloudHosting.com. It does not just add prefixes or suffixes. It understands the niche and swaps keywords with related ones. So it finds names like HostingCloud.co, BestCloud.net, WebHost.io, ServerCloud.org. It finds businesses using different word orders and related terms, not just cloudhosting with something stuck on the front or back.
Why this matters
Other tools find similar looking domains. DNLeads finds businesses that would see your domain as a real upgrade. That is buying intent you can count on.
What you get back
Each lead is checked for:
- Live site or parked page
- Marketing pixels like Facebook and Google
- Payment tools like Stripe
- CMS like WordPress or Shopify
- Registration date compared to yours
What works best
Two word exact match dot coms are the sweet spot. Names like RoofRepair.com or WebDesign.com produce the most leads because there are many businesses on weaker versions.
Three word names work too. Brandables and made up words do not work. There is no keyword ecosystem to scan.
Machine learning layer
DNLeads also uses machine learning to understand the keyword ecosystem around your domain. It looks at related terms, word order, niche patterns, and business signals. So it is not just matching similar domains. It learns which companies are more likely to see your domain as a real upgrade.
That helps surface stronger leads and score them by actual upgrade intent, not just keyword similarity.
My question
How do you currently check if an expired name has real buyers before you buy? Do you search Google? Check past sales? Go with instinct?
I used to guess. Now I run a quick search first. If I see active businesses on weaker names, I buy with confidence. If it is dead, I pass.
Try it free at DNLeads.co. Happy to answer questions or hear what would make it better for your workflow.















