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I'm bad with pricing.
I always overprice like an idiot and scare buyer away. Rooke move even though I've been at this for a bit.
Got a direct message from CEO of a company that just did a successful ICO and sold $30 million worth of coins. They seem to be "making moves" in the middle east and the UAE.
They are interested in my domain. (Remove the ******)
Me**Na can stand for Middle East North Africa or Mena a small down Arkansas.
Domain Price Date Venue
coin.org 75,000 USD 2014-11-12 DomainGuardians
coinnews.com 27,500 USD 2014-04-16 Uniregistry
coin.store 26,705 USD 2018-08-05 Alibaba
coinbag.com 26,000 USD 2018-02-05 Uniregistry
coinlink.com 22,000 USD 2018-02-26 Sedo
coinbook.com 20,000 USD 2017-08-31 Uniregistry
coinking.com 14,190 USD 2018-04-11 Sedo
coinance.com 12,500 USD 2019-01-31 Sedo
cointax.com 12,200 USD 2017-02-20 Sedo
coinrank.com 12,000 USD 2018-03-20 Uniregistry
So is it fair to expect just $27,500 which seems to be the highest sold price for two word .com's starting with "coin"?
also Coin.org is obviously a single dictionary word. not two. Can a seller justify pricing their two word domain the same as a single word domain especially if their two word domain is a .com? and the $75,000 sale was that of a .org?
Is it also fair to extrapolate a higher price based on the current fair market value of a domain that sold back in 2014 for $27,500?
or do you simply go.
"My domain is a two word .com that starts with "coin". The last and highest "Coin" domain that sold was a two word domain for $27,500 back in 2014 so my price for my 1 year old domain should be $27,500 and nothing more."
Plus do Geo's factor into the pricing scheme? Like Mena consists of oil rich countries. but Mena is also Arkansas not really poor but not really rich either.
I always overprice like an idiot and scare buyer away. Rooke move even though I've been at this for a bit.
Got a direct message from CEO of a company that just did a successful ICO and sold $30 million worth of coins. They seem to be "making moves" in the middle east and the UAE.
They are interested in my domain. (Remove the ******)
Me**Na can stand for Middle East North Africa or Mena a small down Arkansas.
Domain Price Date Venue
coin.org 75,000 USD 2014-11-12 DomainGuardians
coinnews.com 27,500 USD 2014-04-16 Uniregistry
coin.store 26,705 USD 2018-08-05 Alibaba
coinbag.com 26,000 USD 2018-02-05 Uniregistry
coinlink.com 22,000 USD 2018-02-26 Sedo
coinbook.com 20,000 USD 2017-08-31 Uniregistry
coinking.com 14,190 USD 2018-04-11 Sedo
coinance.com 12,500 USD 2019-01-31 Sedo
cointax.com 12,200 USD 2017-02-20 Sedo
coinrank.com 12,000 USD 2018-03-20 Uniregistry
So is it fair to expect just $27,500 which seems to be the highest sold price for two word .com's starting with "coin"?
also Coin.org is obviously a single dictionary word. not two. Can a seller justify pricing their two word domain the same as a single word domain especially if their two word domain is a .com? and the $75,000 sale was that of a .org?
Is it also fair to extrapolate a higher price based on the current fair market value of a domain that sold back in 2014 for $27,500?
or do you simply go.
"My domain is a two word .com that starts with "coin". The last and highest "Coin" domain that sold was a two word domain for $27,500 back in 2014 so my price for my 1 year old domain should be $27,500 and nothing more."
Plus do Geo's factor into the pricing scheme? Like Mena consists of oil rich countries. but Mena is also Arkansas not really poor but not really rich either.