I'm coming to the conclusion that it would be better for me to do this, rather than ending up with a load of half completed sites. Of course I get the odd purchase enquiry, and then I have to decide if I want to abandon the "work in progress".


The domains on homepage are the those I've decided are premium. I'm thinking of increasing the prices.Nice prices
Concentrate on search mechanism first. It's critical to the success or failure. It should the cornerstone of the project.My problem was designing a lattice structure
No registrar pages of any sort. It's the script that automatically generates unique landing page for every domain in the database.I noticed that with your site, a direct navigation hit goes to the registrar sales page
Yes. Every domain I buy is for sale on Afternic or elsewhere the minute it reaches my account.
Some names I approach the other way round. If I think it is good for a quick flip, then I'll list the name at a low price (sometimes as low as $25).
Yes! Any name we reg as a likely name for sale gets put up for sale same day, ASAP. Acquired 5 names this week and each was listed " for sale " within an hour of purchase confirmation and, all files I use for their specific data storage completed too, ASAP
Like others mentioned -- as soon as it hits my account, I set it up at my online market place (Landing page is Efty but I also update my marketplace at ToughDomains)
Just $25? Why? Someone who is buying at $25 can surely pay $50 or $75 as well?
Do you see any sales from your own marketplace?
What's meant by Data Storage? Also, do you use BIN?
Is it automatic via API or manual? How do you find the time to add domains daily? Why not do it weekly or monthly?
IMMEDIATEMENT!
Yes, with immediate effect. I sold a name just 5 days after reg, date.
I list mine for sale straight away but as make offer. On marketplaces like afternic, sedo and undeveloped. My nameservers usually point to the afternic page, however im debating whether to get efty or not.
Immediately on my own sales page. Then same or next day I add them to Afternic, Sedo, Uniregistry etc... 90%+ of all sales come direct though because that's where the domains point. So no commission fees and buyer pays all escrow fees on the majority of my sales.
I have rented domains before, but it hasn't always worked out, sometimes after a while the tenant gets lazy and assumes that s/he owns the domain and figures you cannot sell it to anyone else, since it has been off the market for so long, so to speak, or simply gets used to having it without laying out much money, and offers very little to buy it.
Really curious how you guys manage to get around the transfer lock? As far as I know, most domain registrars have a transfer lock period of anywhere between 15 to 60 days, with the majority of them being having a 60-day lock period.
Lock applies to external transfers (registrar to registrar) and not to internal account changes. Just ask the buyer to create an account with same registrar where the domain has been registered, then push to his account. Here is what GD says:



