staringatascreen
Established Member
- Impact
- 174
This is a recurring problem I face. I either overshoot or undershoot my prices. I've sold later appraised $x,xxx domains for $10 and priced others way too high and scared off interest.
Right now, I have an interested party in a pretty good 5L.com and I don't know how to price it. It's a great brandable, memorable, easy to spell, aged, etc., but the interested party is probably not likely to spend much money on it because they are not a well-funded startup or likely to have much money to invest in these kinds of things.
As I said, I'm pretty confident it's a gooden. And there should be interest somewhere down the road, but I've yet to receive any other interest (I haven't really tried very hard). But I've never been good at setting a price point and sticking to it. Should I be pricing based on the prospective client, or just setting an arbitrary price and confidently stating that?
How do y'all do it?
Right now, I have an interested party in a pretty good 5L.com and I don't know how to price it. It's a great brandable, memorable, easy to spell, aged, etc., but the interested party is probably not likely to spend much money on it because they are not a well-funded startup or likely to have much money to invest in these kinds of things.
As I said, I'm pretty confident it's a gooden. And there should be interest somewhere down the road, but I've yet to receive any other interest (I haven't really tried very hard). But I've never been good at setting a price point and sticking to it. Should I be pricing based on the prospective client, or just setting an arbitrary price and confidently stating that?
How do y'all do it?