How to value?

SpaceshipSpaceship
Watch

ALG

Established Member
Impact
4
I have someone who is interested in one of my domain names thats a typo. It's a good typo too. Gets alot of traffic, some clicks and has been around since 2001. Has high overture/wordtracker. The day I picked it up, the person who owned it, emailed me through SEDO (Where I now have it parked) asking for it back.


I have talked to my domainer group and they felt that I was undervaluing the domain.

I know the whole saying of, it's only worth what someone is worth paying.

What to do? What to do?
 
0
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
GoDaddyGoDaddy
its worth a multiple of the monthly revenue, anywhere from 12-36 depending on the name

how much traffic/revenue is there and what niche is it?
 
0
•••
irishmat said:
its worth a multiple of the monthly revenue, anywhere from 12-36 depending on the name

how much traffic/revenue is there and what niche is it?

I think thats fair. I would also consider the related market. Is it growing, stagnant, or declining? This would give you an idea for how many months/years revenue you can ask for.
 
0
•••
and any tm issues will decrease the multiple as the risk increases
 
0
•••
No trademarks, gets at least 300-400 views a day, like i said a few clicks here and there.

Niche is dating
 
0
•••
I think the thing that is going to really determine the ultimate value is how much it actually brings in per month. Once you figure that out, look at the trend of traffic and clicks and decide if it is going up or down or just staying the same.

From there multiply the rev per month you decide and then a little more or less depending on the trends and name.

If you would like me to give you a value you can pm me or post it here.
 
0
•••
Dynadot — .com TransferDynadot — .com Transfer

We're social

Escrow.com
Spaceship
Domain Recover
CryptoExchange.com
Catchy
CatchDoms
DomainEasy — Payment Flexibility
DomDB
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back