@alop
Yeah, biix is a marketplace I put in place. It would be better to use something else for now like Atom like I mentioned above.
I may come back with a hybrid that let's you list on biix & GreatBrand, where it would identify your higher value domains for automatic approval for GreatBrand. I'm trying to solidify the model first.
With rising commission costs at the time, biix was put in place to solve a problem that didn't exist for most. Reducing the commission costs in your domain sales, and selling for slightly higher prices by framing things in a better way. What I found was seemingly 90%+ of domain investors just want to sell their domain quick and get paid quick.
The issue was, most people that tried biix were new, or domain investors with no history of sales. I was trying to solve a problem like I had since 2015, where I had sales that progressed from $50k per year to over $120k per year. So the increasing costs of commissions are real when you have significant sales.
At the time, all the marketplaces were charging between 15%-30% without really adding any value. And 15% of your sale is really like 30% of your profit, and 30% of your sale is more like 60% of your profit after all your other domain renewal expenses.
What biix was doing was charging 2% on transactions so domain investors kept most of what they made. The risk was offloaded to escrow.com.
Since then Atom has come down in commission price at 15% for their Plus service, and that includes advertising to your prior visitors, and Afternic also reduced its prices to 15% when you have it parked with them.
So I enjoyed biix, and got a seller their largest sale ever at $22,966. But even with that transaction the buyers wanted to pay via PayPal only and that created a huge manual headache and risk for me. The one big portfolio owner that wanted to list his large portfolio with biix, requested me to implement a White Label service, I did, then he never came back around. I did get up to about 30,000 domains "listed" on the platform, but not sure how many users just listed them without pointing them there, which makes a huge difference.
If I were to ever come back, I wouldn't come back competing on commission cost. People complain about it, but really most domain investors just want a sale and want to get paid instantly. The number of domain investors that are making $50k+ per year in revenue is likely a very small pool, which kills the low-price business model.
But competing in today's market, I'd have to come back with a decent investment and innovative way to bring new or higher sales because a lot has changed since 2019.