domain LuxuryBrandNames.com

SpaceshipSpaceship
SpaceshipSpaceship
Spacemail by SpaceshipSpacemail by Spaceship
Watch
Status
Not open for further replies.

RU

I'm out of domaining. ~RusselAccount Closed (Requested)
Impact
2,975
Could you please appraise this domain?

BrandNames.com sold for $65,000 - Recent sale (Aug. 27, 2014)

Thanks.
 
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Unstoppable Domains — AI StorefrontUnstoppable Domains — AI Storefront
Yes I was serious. I think the combination really works.
 
1
•••
Yes I was serious. I think the combination really works.

It's your opinion, and i respect it as opinion.

However, we're not supposed to deceive less-experienced users with $x,xxx or $xx,xxx appraisals, we barely see LLL.com sold at these figures, and you think a three words new registered domain name can be sold at $xx,xxx as is?
 
0
•••
Can you please advise me which is the best font to design logo?
fontlogo.png
 
0
•••
First one.
 
1
•••
I see someone reg'd BrandNameConsultants(.)com..."brandname" mania :-,
 
0
•••
Can you please advise me which is the best font to design logo?
Show attachment 7077

The 1st and last ones work for me. The 1st in part because it says 'LUXURY' in a bold and unapologetic way. The last especially because it's clean looking. No unnecessary lines in the lettering. It suggests 'class'/'classy'/'elegant simplicity' to me.

I'm seeing the 1st font style as one for bigger items, like homes. The last for smaller items, more 'personal' items. Items with 'simple elegance'. Like maybe shoes, maybe even cars(?) But the last one could also work for bigger, tastefully done items. Like a tastefully done luxury home, for example.

My Personal tastes when it comes to those fonts. Don't know if your target market(s) for such a name would agree. I might present the name with both fonts, if possible.
 
1
•••
The 1st and last ones work for me. The 1st in part because it says 'LUXURY' in a bold and unapologetic way. The last especially because it's clean looking. No unnecessary lines in the lettering. It suggests 'class'/'classy'/'elegant simplicity' to me.

I'm seeing the 1st font style as one for bigger items, like homes. The last for smaller items, more 'personal' items. Items with 'simple elegance'. Like maybe shoes, maybe even cars(?) But the last one could also work for bigger, tastefully done items. Like a tastefully done luxury home, for example.

My Personal tastes when it comes to those fonts. Don't know if your target market(s) for such a name would agree. I might present the name with both fonts, if possible.
Thank you for your advice, I really appreciate it.
 
1
•••
What's a Luxury Brand Name ?

I don't think it works mate. You can't just put luxury in front of a valuable name and think it still brings value.

Not saying this will work in all instances, but from the book The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing, written by the pioneers of the marketing concept 'positioning' - Al Ries and Jack Trout:

"The Law of Division: Over time, a category will divide and become 2 or more categories."

As a btw, I thought I maybe saw a couple luxury brand name possibilities in mati's list of 20 .com brand names thread - 'Lucreti' and 'Alavante'.
 
1
•••
Not saying this will work in all instances, but from the book The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing, written by the pioneers of the marketing concept 'positioning' - Al Ries and Jack Trout:

"The Law of Division: Over time, a category will divide and become 2 or more categories."

As a btw, I thought I maybe saw a couple luxury brand name possibilities in mati's list of 20 .com brand names thread - 'Lucreti' and 'Alavante'.
I like simple logos (e.g.: eyewearbrands.com).
Good logos have always been relatively simple in appearance.
 
0
•••
I like simple logos (e.g.: eyewearbrands.com).
Good logos have always been relatively simple in appearance.

From my knowledge about logos, 'good logos' can become a 'rebus' for the brand name. They can come to stand for the brand name. Simple in appearance is good for that.

Then there's 'visual hammers' - a step beyond good logos, rebuses.

Btw: LuxBrandNames.com was available - 'lux' a shortened version for 'luxury' - so I grabbed it, in case someone else might while reading this thread. In case you might want to market such as well. Maybe even just as a defensive move to cover LuxuryBrandNames.com.

&/or possibly use it as a brandable for the term 'luxury brand names'?

LuxBrandNames.com | Luxury brand names for the discriminating buyer.

Pay the reg fee for it (and any transfer fees?), if and when you might be ready for it, and it's yours.
 
1
•••
Btw, Ru, if you haven't already, you could go to BrandRoot and see in the featured domain names 'luxquisite'. It'll give a font type idea/design that they used for such a name.
 
1
•••
Serious mania. Have you picked up LuxuryBrandNameConsultants.com to protect your new domain?

I personally would have a big domain brand protection company protect this name, you can never be too careful when you have a gem like your LuxuryBrandNames.com domain
 
1
•••
Serious mania. Have you picked up LuxuryBrandNameConsultants.com to protect your new domain?

I personally would have a big domain brand protection company protect this name, you can never be too careful when you have a gem like your LuxuryBrandNames.com domain
LOL
 
0
•••
It's not worth much now, but for a domain seller, it is a great marketplace name to use.
 
0
•••
I think the consensus has things about right in this case.

No real resale value. It's okay if you really intend to use it for a site. But don't build a site just to use it.
 
0
•••
Status
Not open for further replies.
Dynadot — .com TransferDynadot — .com Transfer
CatchedCatched

We're social

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