Is domaining for Beginners?
Domaining remains a promising side hustle or even a full-time career for those who understand the landscape. With the right strategies, even beginners can build a solid portfolio and turn domains into digital assets that generate profit. This is what I would do if I started from scratch today:
1. Choose Your Domain Names Wisely
The foundation of domaining success lies in your ability to identify valuable domain names. Here are a few proven approaches:
Brandables: Short, catchy, easy-to-pronounce names (e.g., Zumba, Wix) are attractive for startups and can sell for high prices. Think of names that are easy to spell and remember. Examples include names like Zillow, Spotify, or Trello they don't necessarily mean anything until the brand gives them meaning.
Tips for brandables:
There’s a strong aftermarket demand for clever brandables in industries like SaaS, fintech, health, and AI.
Keywords with High Search Potential: Domains with keywords that people frequently search for have built-in traffic potential and are attractive for content marketers, affiliate businesses, and SEO professionals.
For example: ElectricScooters.tld and GamerLaptops.tld contain keywords that score highly in monthly searches.
Use tools like:
Intent-Related Keywords: Unlike keyword centric names These include words like “buy,” “cheap,” “best,” “repair,” or “near me” all indicators of strong user intent. So these will not have such high search volume but will have the most traffic with people looking to take action!
Example: BuyElectricScooters.tld and GamerLaptopsForSale.tld
These names may not be beautiful, but they convert!, which makes them valuable to small businesses and affiliates.
Also works well for geo-targeting niches. Adding city or regional modifiers (e.g., DallasPlumbingExperts.tld) also increases it's sale potential to any plumbing company in dallas.
.com Still Reigns Supreme: While new TLDs (top-level domains) like .xyz, .tech, or .shop may seem trendy, they often carry lower resale value and credibility compared to .com.
2. Beware of Trendy TLDs and Hidden Costs
Though it’s tempting to buy into flashy TLDs or niche keywords, remember that trends fade. What’s hot in this year might be irrelevant by next. Also, watch out for renewal fees. Some domains have cheap first-year prices but skyrocket upon renewal, especially with newer TLDs. Before buying, check the renewal pricing and avoid domains that aren’t worth the long-term investment.
Other Things to avoid:
3. Build and Manage a Domain Portfolio
Start small and build a portfolio of domains that target various niches. Use a spreadsheet to track purchase prices, expiration dates, registrar details, and notes on potential buyers.
Signup om domain flipping marketplaces like:
4. Have multiple Payment Options
Buyers come from all over the world, and flexibility can make or break a deal. Have accounts set up with:
5. Develop and Market Your Best Domains
If you own a domain that gets traffic, don’t just park it develop it. Even a simple blog or landing page can increase its value by having content or being approved for Adsense monetization.
You can also post affiliate offers or digital products for recurring revenue.
6. Be Active in the Community
Domaining isn’t just technical it’s also social. Start a blog documenting your domaining journey. Share your wins, your losses, and your insights. Post in Namepros forums or even Facebook groups dedicated to domaining
The more you post and engage, the more connections you’ll make some of which can turn into sales opportunities.
So to recap I’d avoid the trap of chasing hyped trends registering 100+ domains and hoping one sells. Instead, I’d focus on:
Domaining has slow returns, it's part skill, part hustle, and part luck but the people who treat it like a business, not a lottery, are the ones that make it work.
Domaining remains a promising side hustle or even a full-time career for those who understand the landscape. With the right strategies, even beginners can build a solid portfolio and turn domains into digital assets that generate profit. This is what I would do if I started from scratch today:
1. Choose Your Domain Names Wisely
The foundation of domaining success lies in your ability to identify valuable domain names. Here are a few proven approaches:
Brandables: Short, catchy, easy-to-pronounce names (e.g., Zumba, Wix) are attractive for startups and can sell for high prices. Think of names that are easy to spell and remember. Examples include names like Zillow, Spotify, or Trello they don't necessarily mean anything until the brand gives them meaning.
Tips for brandables:
- Keep it under 10 characters if possible.
- Avoid hyphens and numbers.
- Must be pronounceable for your target language.
- Test it by saying it out loud. If someone asks, “How do you spell that?” — it’s not ideal.
- Use suffixes like -ly, -hub, or -io if relevant to the target audience.
There’s a strong aftermarket demand for clever brandables in industries like SaaS, fintech, health, and AI.
Keywords with High Search Potential: Domains with keywords that people frequently search for have built-in traffic potential and are attractive for content marketers, affiliate businesses, and SEO professionals.
For example: ElectricScooters.tld and GamerLaptops.tld contain keywords that score highly in monthly searches.
Use tools like:
- Google Keyword Planner
- Ubersuggest
- Ahrefs
- SEMrush
Intent-Related Keywords: Unlike keyword centric names These include words like “buy,” “cheap,” “best,” “repair,” or “near me” all indicators of strong user intent. So these will not have such high search volume but will have the most traffic with people looking to take action!
Example: BuyElectricScooters.tld and GamerLaptopsForSale.tld
These names may not be beautiful, but they convert!, which makes them valuable to small businesses and affiliates.
Also works well for geo-targeting niches. Adding city or regional modifiers (e.g., DallasPlumbingExperts.tld) also increases it's sale potential to any plumbing company in dallas.
.com Still Reigns Supreme: While new TLDs (top-level domains) like .xyz, .tech, or .shop may seem trendy, they often carry lower resale value and credibility compared to .com.
- Rule of thumb: If the .com version is taken and in active use, it’s often not worth registering an alternate TLD unless you’re adding major value or it's a dictionary word.
- if you know a service or company that was a ABCDigitalAgency.com you may sell them ABC.agency as so they may use it to shorten URLs
- If you stumble upon a keyword that has .com available and has other extensions taken (and those sites aren't spam) reg it! piggyback on the traffic if not much traffic try and sell it to the other sites.
- Evergreen industries: health, money, relationships, education.
- Tech shifts: AI, robotics, remote work.
- Local services and niches: roofing, legal, dental, etc.
2. Beware of Trendy TLDs and Hidden Costs
Though it’s tempting to buy into flashy TLDs or niche keywords, remember that trends fade. What’s hot in this year might be irrelevant by next. Also, watch out for renewal fees. Some domains have cheap first-year prices but skyrocket upon renewal, especially with newer TLDs. Before buying, check the renewal pricing and avoid domains that aren’t worth the long-term investment.
Other Things to avoid:
- Typos (even if they get traffic it's less than a second)
- Backhat domains, phishing reported domains, banned from google, etc.
- special chars, emojis, hyphens, numbers, letters XQZY
- Keyword hacks (delicio.us, music.ly, shoppingc.art, etc)
- trademarks (not worth it, it will be removed from your account, no one will buy it or you will be sued if you try to develop it)
- Slang, buzzword, cuss words, political terms, once in a lifetime events (y2k, mayan apocalypse, h1n1, covid19, etc)
3. Build and Manage a Domain Portfolio
Start small and build a portfolio of domains that target various niches. Use a spreadsheet to track purchase prices, expiration dates, registrar details, and notes on potential buyers.
Signup om domain flipping marketplaces like:
- Dan.com
- Afternic
- Sedo
- GoDaddy Auctions
- Flippa
4. Have multiple Payment Options
Buyers come from all over the world, and flexibility can make or break a deal. Have accounts set up with:
- PayPal
- Stripe
- Payoneer
- Escrow.com (for large transactions)
5. Develop and Market Your Best Domains
If you own a domain that gets traffic, don’t just park it develop it. Even a simple blog or landing page can increase its value by having content or being approved for Adsense monetization.
You can also post affiliate offers or digital products for recurring revenue.
6. Be Active in the Community
Domaining isn’t just technical it’s also social. Start a blog documenting your domaining journey. Share your wins, your losses, and your insights. Post in Namepros forums or even Facebook groups dedicated to domaining
The more you post and engage, the more connections you’ll make some of which can turn into sales opportunities.
So to recap I’d avoid the trap of chasing hyped trends registering 100+ domains and hoping one sells. Instead, I’d focus on:
- Tight niche targeting
- Small portfolio (10–20 max at first)
- Active outreach (dm, email and call anyone that might be interested)
- Real conversations
- Developing potential (Have a mentality of "What Can I sell here?" or "Who can I sell this to?")
Domaining has slow returns, it's part skill, part hustle, and part luck but the people who treat it like a business, not a lottery, are the ones that make it work.









