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Hi everyone,
In collaboration with NameFind, the GoDaddy-owned portfolio of domains, I've written an article about domain name pricing psychology based on a test that NameFind ran. This test included a substantial batch of domains with an equal control group.
In short, NameFind's experiment found that pricing domain names ($2,500-$10,000 BIN) to their nearest 499/999 price point (moving either up or down) resulted in significantly higher revenue while also increasing the average sales price and the number of sales.
Why is this notable? NameFind has a large enough portfolio to test and discover statistically significant results, providing results and insights that all domain investors can test and implement. It's the first time that NameFind has shared this information in a blog post, too.
I'm planning several blog posts with NameFind, with the next one being the results of NameFind's 111 pricing.
Read the 499/999 article here.
In collaboration with NameFind, the GoDaddy-owned portfolio of domains, I've written an article about domain name pricing psychology based on a test that NameFind ran. This test included a substantial batch of domains with an equal control group.
In short, NameFind's experiment found that pricing domain names ($2,500-$10,000 BIN) to their nearest 499/999 price point (moving either up or down) resulted in significantly higher revenue while also increasing the average sales price and the number of sales.
Why is this notable? NameFind has a large enough portfolio to test and discover statistically significant results, providing results and insights that all domain investors can test and implement. It's the first time that NameFind has shared this information in a blog post, too.
I'm planning several blog posts with NameFind, with the next one being the results of NameFind's 111 pricing.
Read the 499/999 article here.