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warning My Spaceship Horror Story

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Kazama San

Established Member
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I am writing this to inform everyone about the MASSIVE downsides of using Spaceship for selling domains that involve negotiating with buyers.

I had the misfortune of losing a $2700 sale on January 24, 2026 just because of scant regard and rigidity shown by Spaceship’s support agents toward buyer sensitivities and time. They literally blew a $2700 sale just because of their rigidity and tall claims.

THE DETAILS:

Screenshot 2026-01-26 at 3.18.14 PM.png


So, after over a month of negotiations from an opening offer of $1800 for a crypto domain with $4888 BIN, I’d managed to convince the buyer to go up to $2700. I initially thought that I was underselling or the buyer could also be a broker and they may be lowballing me.

But I needed the funds and the buyer, as I later found out, was not lowballing and it was genuinely their best offer. This buyer, likely launching their first startup with limited capital, agreed to my counter offer of $2700. An agreement was reached.

However, I received a message from Spaceship’s support agent that the buyer has requested to make the payment in 2 instalments. They asked me if I agree to the buyer’s request and then Spaceship will need to cancel the agreement and the buyer will need to send an offer again and then I’ll have to accept it.

I responded saying I am fine with it. Soon, I received a notification/email that read: “Negotiation is Canceled” and “Payment expired”. Notice the use of strong negative language here. Goes a long way in spooking a hesitant buyer or at least sowing the seeds of doubt in their minds.

Screenshot 2026-01-26 at 3.17.01 PM.png


Unsurprisingly, I, too, was beginning to get anxious. Some sort of fear was creeping in. So, I contacted chat support just to confirm whether Spaceship had relayed the message to the buyer in clear and polite terms.

It’s pertinent to note that the buyer was not a native speaker and their broken English was barely understandable at times. No offence here.

However, the buyer was faithful and quickly made another offer within 5 minutes. This time they said they wanted to make the payment in 2 instalments.

However, they wanted to pay in February and March and preferably wanted to schedule the payment in the middle of February.

Since it was January 24th, I wasn’t sure how Spaceship would process such a weird transaction request. I was worried the support agent might as well cancel this negotiation or ask the buyer to wait it out till Feb 15th.

And… just like that friction was setting in. I could sense this was turning into a dicey situation. One instance of bad messaging could ruin over a month of negotiations.

Screenshot 2026-01-26 at 3.15.59 PM.png


I hurriedly agreed to the buyer’s offer. I dropped a message via chat window asking what the buyer meant by their offer. Since the buyer was making a purchase in January that would mean he has to pay the 1st instalment in January itself and then in Feb or March whenever he is comfortable.

However, this message didn’t go through to the buyer. Instead the support agent received it.

I asked them again to please clarify with the buyer. The support agent told me as the agreement is reached for the second time, it is not possible to contact the buyer now. “So the new deal needs to be created from the buyer's side.”

REPEATEDLY TURNING DOWN REQUESTS:


Screenshot 2026-01-26 at 3.16.16 PM.png


I also requested them to allow the buyer to club their 3rd offer with their second offer itself, instead of sending them another email/message with a threatening tone: “Negotiation is Canceled” and “Payment expired”. You know how that works wonders with buyers?

Here’s the most important part and I’ll quote again: “So the new deal needs to be created from the buyer's side.”

Meaning I will need to wait for the buyer to make another offer.

RUINED DEAL:

Spaceship automatically assumes buyers have lots of patience, time and are constantly in a mood to play offer/counter offer games with strangers sitting in some other corner of the world on a strange website that has canceled their offer TWICE already.

You never know how the dice may roll this time. As a seller I needed to wait for the buyer to make another offer for the third time. THIRD TIME! My intuition told me this deal is wasted.

As expected, the buyer developed cold feet and “suddenly” became unresponsive. I contacted chat support to get in touch with the buyer immediately.

Screenshot 2026-01-26 at 3.17.15 PM.png


They responded saying we have already messaged the buyer, nothing else needs to be done now. I enquired would it be possible for Spaceship to “open” the closed/canceled deal so that, perhaps, I could convince the buyer. Crickets, that’s not allowed on RIGID Spaceship.

Perhaps at that moment I realised I’d snatched defeat from the jaws of victory thanks to mighty Spaceship. They ruined a confirmed deal just because of their poor messaging, rigid system, indifferent support agents and ZERO flexibility.

TALL CLAIMS:


A couple of weeks ago, their ex-CEO announced on X that domain investors will be able to re-open closed leads and contact them once again “after a week” and that read receipts has already been rolled out to users.

While I wait for the first promise to be fulfilled, I can confirm read receipts doesn’t work, at least, for me. Tall claims on X with a dash of brown-nosing fans and indifferent support with nothing but excuses to back it up.

I’d also messaged the ex-CEO explaining my ordeal at the time but he was too busy.

IS AFTERNIC BETTER?

At this time, the clear takeaway for me is that Afternic is MILES better in terms of poaching leads and converting them. That 15% commission might sound extreme (20% with boost on and up to 30% with name servers pointed elsewhere), but at least Afternic doesn’t ruin your sales.

I have criticised Afternic in the past for their archaic backend but they do give me the most number of sales and convert old leads well. OTOH, Spaceship ruins “confirmed” deals just because of their nonchalant support agents and absolutely apathetic behaviour.

To their credit, Spaceship does attract a certain subset of buyers, and is a good market for certain types of domains, and coupled with 5% commish, the enticement is real.

However, the part that stung me the most was how Spaceship ruined the deal when it casually canceled the transaction for the second time around. Absolute deal killer.

MORAL OF THE STORY:

Be careful when importing leads on Spaceship, or negotiating with buyers, their inflexible system and nonchalant support agents’ attitude might as well ruin your confirmed deal(s).
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
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Reading things like this just hardens my resolve to stick with the NamePros landers.....

Any fuck ups in negotiations, getting the deal completed etc rest solely on me....

Hopefully the potential buyer comes back or buys it via another platform...
 
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Sorry about your ordeal.

To their credit, Spaceship does attract a certain subset of buyers, and is a good market for certain types of domains
Can you elaborate on this?
 
4
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I am writing this to inform everyone about the MASSIVE downsides of using Spaceship for selling domains that involve negotiating with buyers.

I had the misfortune of losing a $2700 sale on January 24, 2026 just because of scant regard and rigidity shown by Spaceship’s support agents toward buyer sensitivities and time. They literally blew a $2700 sale just because of their rigidity and tall claims.

THE DETAILS:

Show attachment 293747


So, after over a month of negotiations from an opening offer of $1800 for a crypto domain with $4888 BIN, I’d managed to convince the buyer to go up to $2700. I initially thought that I was underselling or the buyer could also be a broker and they may be lowballing me.

But I needed the funds and the buyer, as I later found out, was not lowballing and it was genuinely their best offer. This buyer, likely launching their first startup with limited capital, agreed to my counter offer of $2700. An agreement was reached.

However, I received a message from Spaceship’s support agent that the buyer has requested to make the payment in 2 instalments. They asked me if I agree to the buyer’s request and then Spaceship will need to cancel the agreement and the buyer will need to send an offer again and then I’ll have to accept it.

I responded saying I am fine with it. Soon, I received a notification/email that read: “Negotiation is Canceled” and “Payment expired”. Notice the use of strong negative language here. Goes a long way in spooking a hesitant buyer or at least sowing the seeds of doubt in their minds.

Show attachment 293749

Unsurprisingly, I, too, was beginning to get anxious. Some sort of fear was creeping in. So, I contacted chat support just to confirm whether Spaceship had relayed the message to the buyer in clear and polite terms.

It’s pertinent to note that the buyer was not a native speaker and their broken English was barely understandable at times. No offence here.

However, the buyer was faithful and quickly made another offer within 5 minutes. This time they said they wanted to make the payment in 2 instalments.

However, they wanted to pay in February and March and preferably wanted to schedule the payment in the middle of February.

Since it was January 24th, I wasn’t sure how Spaceship would process such a weird transaction request. I was worried the support agent might as well cancel this negotiation or ask the buyer to wait it out till Feb 15th.

And… just like that friction was setting in. I could sense this was turning into a dicey situation. One instance of bad messaging could ruin over a month of negotiations.

Show attachment 293753

I hurriedly agreed to the buyer’s offer. I dropped a message via chat window asking what the buyer meant by their offer. Since the buyer was making a purchase in January that would mean he has to pay the 1st instalment in January itself and then in Feb or March whenever he is comfortable.

However, this message didn’t go through to the buyer. Instead the support agent received it.

I asked them again to please clarify with the buyer. The support agent told me as the agreement is reached for the second time, it is not possible to contact the buyer now. “So the new deal needs to be created from the buyer's side.”

REPEATEDLY TURNING DOWN REQUESTS:


Show attachment 293752

I also requested them to allow the buyer to club their 3rd offer with their second offer itself, instead of sending them another email/message with a threatening tone: “Negotiation is Canceled” and “Payment expired”. You know how that works wonders with buyers?

Here’s the most important part and I’ll quote again: “So the new deal needs to be created from the buyer's side.”

Meaning I will need to wait for the buyer to make another offer.

RUINED DEAL:

Spaceship automatically assumes buyers have lots of patience, time and are constantly in a mood to play offer/counter offer games with strangers sitting in some other corner of the world on a strange website that has canceled their offer TWICE already.

You never know how the dice may roll this time. As a seller I needed to wait for the buyer to make another offer for the third time. THIRD TIME! My intuition told me this deal is wasted.

As expected, the buyer developed cold feet and “suddenly” became unresponsive. I contacted chat support to get in touch with the buyer immediately.

Show attachment 293751

They responded saying we have already messaged the buyer, nothing else needs to be done now. I enquired would it be possible for Spaceship to “open” the closed/canceled deal so that, perhaps, I could convince the buyer. Crickets, that’s not allowed on RIGID Spaceship.

Perhaps at that moment I realised I’d snatched defeat from the jaws of victory thanks to mighty Spaceship. They ruined a confirmed deal just because of their poor messaging, rigid system, indifferent support agents and ZERO flexibility.

TALL CLAIMS:


A couple of weeks ago, their ex-CEO announced on X that domain investors will be able to re-open closed leads and contact them once again “after a week” and that read receipts has already been rolled out to users.

While I wait for the first promise to be fulfilled, I can confirm read receipts doesn’t work, at least, for me. Tall claims on X with a dash of brown-nosing fans and indifferent support with nothing but excuses to back it up.

I’d also messaged the ex-CEO explaining my ordeal at the time but he was too busy.

IS AFTERNIC BETTER?

At this time, the clear takeaway for me is that Afternic is MILES better in terms of poaching leads and converting them. That 15% commission might sound extreme (20% with boost on and up to 30% with name servers pointed elsewhere), but at least Afternic doesn’t ruin your sales.

I have criticised Afternic in the past for their archaic backend but they do give me the most number of sales and convert old leads well. OTOH, Spaceship ruins “confirmed” deals just because of their nonchalant support agents and absolutely apathetic behaviour.

To their credit, Spaceship does attract a certain subset of buyers, and is a good market for certain types of domains, and coupled with 5% commish, the enticement is real.

However, the part that stung me the most was how Spaceship ruined the deal when it casually canceled the transaction for the second time around. Absolute deal killer.

MORAL OF THE STORY:

Be careful when importing leads on Spaceship, or negotiating with buyers, their inflexible system and nonchalant support agents’ attitude might as well ruin your confirmed deal(s).
It's disheartening to read this from you. Kindly list the domain again with Afternic. I believe the potential buyer will keep eyes on the domain name if it really fits in to his project. That's part of ugly experiences we learn in domain investment. Thank you for sharing your experience.
 
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I suspect the same with another marketplace as well where any enquiries may just diverted to other names where they get higher commission on sales or with whom they have a deal (Just suspecting). If thats the case unless buyer just buys the domain but contact the lander page support there is a risk they suggest other names from certain portfolios instead of negotiating the price and we would end up loosing the sale and some porfolios make sales repeatedly even if the names are average. Same goes with visibility given to the respective portfolios by the marketplace. May be i am overthinking
We wont know unless there is a complete transparency.

Better use NP lander or a lander which let the user just contact you through a form. So that our domain wouldnt just be a traffic source for them while paying high premium if sold.
 
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Sorry about your ordeal.


Can you elaborate on this?
Spaceship/Namecheap's distribution network suits certain types of domain niches/buyers. That is, some buyers may prefer to purchase via SS and/or NC reg path. Again, it's very niche-specific.
 
0
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Spaceship/Namecheap's distribution network suits certain types of domain niches/buyers. That is, some buyers may prefer to purchase via SS and/or NC reg path. Again, it's very niche-specific.
Again, can you clarify which domain niches you are referring to?
 
3
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I am writing this to inform everyone about the MASSIVE downsides of using Spaceship for selling domains that involve negotiating with buyers.

I had the misfortune of losing a $2700 sale on January 24, 2026 just because of scant regard and rigidity shown by Spaceship’s support agents toward buyer sensitivities and time. They literally blew a $2700 sale just because of their rigidity and tall claims.

THE DETAILS:

Show attachment 293747


So, after over a month of negotiations from an opening offer of $1800 for a crypto domain with $4888 BIN, I’d managed to convince the buyer to go up to $2700. I initially thought that I was underselling or the buyer could also be a broker and they may be lowballing me.

But I needed the funds and the buyer, as I later found out, was not lowballing and it was genuinely their best offer. This buyer, likely launching their first startup with limited capital, agreed to my counter offer of $2700. An agreement was reached.

However, I received a message from Spaceship’s support agent that the buyer has requested to make the payment in 2 instalments. They asked me if I agree to the buyer’s request and then Spaceship will need to cancel the agreement and the buyer will need to send an offer again and then I’ll have to accept it.

I responded saying I am fine with it. Soon, I received a notification/email that read: “Negotiation is Canceled” and “Payment expired”. Notice the use of strong negative language here. Goes a long way in spooking a hesitant buyer or at least sowing the seeds of doubt in their minds.

Show attachment 293749

Unsurprisingly, I, too, was beginning to get anxious. Some sort of fear was creeping in. So, I contacted chat support just to confirm whether Spaceship had relayed the message to the buyer in clear and polite terms.

It’s pertinent to note that the buyer was not a native speaker and their broken English was barely understandable at times. No offence here.

However, the buyer was faithful and quickly made another offer within 5 minutes. This time they said they wanted to make the payment in 2 instalments.

However, they wanted to pay in February and March and preferably wanted to schedule the payment in the middle of February.

Since it was January 24th, I wasn’t sure how Spaceship would process such a weird transaction request. I was worried the support agent might as well cancel this negotiation or ask the buyer to wait it out till Feb 15th.

And… just like that friction was setting in. I could sense this was turning into a dicey situation. One instance of bad messaging could ruin over a month of negotiations.

Show attachment 293753

I hurriedly agreed to the buyer’s offer. I dropped a message via chat window asking what the buyer meant by their offer. Since the buyer was making a purchase in January that would mean he has to pay the 1st instalment in January itself and then in Feb or March whenever he is comfortable.

However, this message didn’t go through to the buyer. Instead the support agent received it.

I asked them again to please clarify with the buyer. The support agent told me as the agreement is reached for the second time, it is not possible to contact the buyer now. “So the new deal needs to be created from the buyer's side.”

REPEATEDLY TURNING DOWN REQUESTS:


Show attachment 293752

I also requested them to allow the buyer to club their 3rd offer with their second offer itself, instead of sending them another email/message with a threatening tone: “Negotiation is Canceled” and “Payment expired”. You know how that works wonders with buyers?

Here’s the most important part and I’ll quote again: “So the new deal needs to be created from the buyer's side.”

Meaning I will need to wait for the buyer to make another offer.

RUINED DEAL:

Spaceship automatically assumes buyers have lots of patience, time and are constantly in a mood to play offer/counter offer games with strangers sitting in some other corner of the world on a strange website that has canceled their offer TWICE already.

You never know how the dice may roll this time. As a seller I needed to wait for the buyer to make another offer for the third time. THIRD TIME! My intuition told me this deal is wasted.

As expected, the buyer developed cold feet and “suddenly” became unresponsive. I contacted chat support to get in touch with the buyer immediately.

Show attachment 293751

They responded saying we have already messaged the buyer, nothing else needs to be done now. I enquired would it be possible for Spaceship to “open” the closed/canceled deal so that, perhaps, I could convince the buyer. Crickets, that’s not allowed on RIGID Spaceship.

Perhaps at that moment I realised I’d snatched defeat from the jaws of victory thanks to mighty Spaceship. They ruined a confirmed deal just because of their poor messaging, rigid system, indifferent support agents and ZERO flexibility.

TALL CLAIMS:


A couple of weeks ago, their ex-CEO announced on X that domain investors will be able to re-open closed leads and contact them once again “after a week” and that read receipts has already been rolled out to users.

While I wait for the first promise to be fulfilled, I can confirm read receipts doesn’t work, at least, for me. Tall claims on X with a dash of brown-nosing fans and indifferent support with nothing but excuses to back it up.

I’d also messaged the ex-CEO explaining my ordeal at the time but he was too busy.

IS AFTERNIC BETTER?

At this time, the clear takeaway for me is that Afternic is MILES better in terms of poaching leads and converting them. That 15% commission might sound extreme (20% with boost on and up to 30% with name servers pointed elsewhere), but at least Afternic doesn’t ruin your sales.

I have criticised Afternic in the past for their archaic backend but they do give me the most number of sales and convert old leads well. OTOH, Spaceship ruins “confirmed” deals just because of their nonchalant support agents and absolutely apathetic behaviour.

To their credit, Spaceship does attract a certain subset of buyers, and is a good market for certain types of domains, and coupled with 5% commish, the enticement is real.

However, the part that stung me the most was how Spaceship ruined the deal when it casually canceled the transaction for the second time around. Absolute deal killer.

MORAL OF THE STORY:

Be careful when importing leads on Spaceship, or negotiating with buyers, their inflexible system and nonchalant support agents’ attitude might as well ruin your confirmed deal(s).
Most cancelled deals I had were with afternic, but I had enough with sedo, dan and atom as well, even self brokered, buyers coming from whois or email, that"s a risk you will always have with domains. I had deal at atom, when the buyer paid the full amount and changed their mind before I could receive the payout. Atom and afternic/godaddy in particular, are known to make a lot of suggestions to buyer, to buy another domain, where they earn higher commission, sometimes even after a deal is reached. Dan had a lower risk, because the support agents were very responsive and that helped to keep the buyer engaged and confident. In the last two months I had two sales with afternic where the buyer paid and eventually they cancelled the sale, because the buyer changed their minds, without anybody telling me the real reason. Also, after inquiries to afternic every two days about an update of the transaction, their final email was always saying that they cancelled the deal because I was unresponsive. When I asked them how it's possible to blame me, when every chat is recorded...then no reply. So, at this point, I will trust less afternic/godaddy than any other platform.
 
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I am sympathetic to your lost deal but this is an issue at your end, not Spaceship's.

Spaceship is a low commission marketplace not a broker. Your responsibility is to understand the platform and conduct deals accordingly. The negotiation of a sale includes negotiating on how payment will be made. You've negotiated a $2,700 deal with a buyer who can't afford to pay $2,700!

Spaceship's support team should not have been involved in the deal until after payment had been made. Spaceship cannot negotiate on your behalf and cannot rescue a deal that cannot complete. Spaceship tried to help you by advising you of their lease-to-own feature but that is still your responsibility to negotiate that with the buyer. Lease-to-own is not equivalent to split payments.

Unfortunately, you agreed to a sale with a buyer who could not pay. The marketplace you chose was irrelevant, negotiating via Afternic would have had the same outcome, as would using NamePros or Escrow.com or Sedo or... sp on and so forth.

For the future: when you start negotiating with a buyer, you need to keep in mind that payment is an important part of how a deal will complete. Are they an executive of a cash-rich business? Are they a low-level employee without authorization to spend? Are they a regular person who has never bought a domain before? If your buyer is a regular person, not an expert in domains, you are going to need to walk them through everything.

The moral of the story is that negotiation is much more than just sending numbers back and forth. You need to understand your buyer. A buyer that is exceeding the maximum they want to spend is party to a very fragile deal. Convincing a buyer to agree to an amount that they aren't comfortable with all but guarantees the deal will fall apart. You have to treat these sorts of deals with kid gloves, like you're teaching a child how to handle a boiling hot pot. A single wrong move and someone is getting burned.

If you don't feel comfortable negotiating like this, then you need a broker. Switch back to Afternic and use their brokerage service instead. The commission they take is very reasonable if you need a broker.
 
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And, to add, a little negotiation advice:

So, after over a month of negotiations from an opening offer of $1800 for a crypto domain with $4888 BIN, I’d managed to convince the buyer to go up to $2700. I initially thought that I was underselling or the buyer could also be a broker and they may be lowballing me.

But I needed the funds and the buyer, as I later found out, was not lowballing and it was genuinely their best offer. This buyer, likely launching their first startup with limited capital, agreed to my counter offer of $2700. An agreement was reached.

Negotiation is all about leverage. Leverage can be anything from knowing that the other party has already invested money in a brand to you being so rich you don't need to sell domains to survive. If you "needed the funds" then you had almost no leverage! You were in a terrible negotiating position.

Every interaction you have in a negotiation has a cost, from the risk of upsetting the buyer to giving them too much time to consider whether they actually want to spend that amount of money or even giving them time to find another domain. A counter offer is very costly because you're putting everything back in the hands of the buyer.

The mistake so many domain name owners make is in thinking of a negotiation as something you ratchet up, and if you miss with a counter, it's okay, you're safe with the previously agreed price. That's not true! You are not climbing a ladder, with a checkpoint at each level. Every time you counter, you are taking a leap of faith, hoping that the buyer grabs your hand. A counter offer is rolling dice, with the very possibility of losing the deal.

When you received the $1,800 offer you should not have asked yourself "could I convince this buyer to spend more than $1,800?" you should have asked yourself "how much is $1,800 worth to me today?". A bird in the hand is worth 2 in the bush. Pushing a buyer to stretch from $1,800 to $2,700 is not good negotiation. The success of a negotiation is not measured on the final agreed upon price. There is no such thing as "underselling".

If you need money, and receive an $1,800 offer on a domain you have listed for $5k then you should immediately take the offer. Don't give the buyer time to even consider their purchase. Your buy it now price should always be ~30 - 50% higher than the amount you would take no questions asked and in time of financial need you can be even more flexible.

Last week I sold a domain. I pitched it to the buyer at $10k, they countered with $5k. I know they have very deep pockets and that the domain is worth at least $10k to them. I knew that they were countering with $5k because they want to feel like they are getting a good deal, and are expert negotiators. I believed that I could get them up to $10k quite easily, by walking away from the negotiation and then waiting a few weeks for them to come back to me....

...and so I did what any sensible investor would do... I countered with $7,500 and then agreed to $6,500 if they paid same day (via Spaceship). They agreed, made payment an hour later, deal done. The buyer is happy that they got a great deal, I am happy I secured a sale. I will not waste a moment worrying about "underselling" the domain. I have $6,500 today that I didn't have yesterday. That's a win.

A $6,500 sale completed within hours of first contact is better than being confident that I could have a $10k deal completed in a month. A $1,800 deal completed within hours of first contact is fantastic when you were willing to risk it all for $2,700. Especially if you need the money.
 
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I am sympathetic to your lost deal but this is an issue at your end, not Spaceship's.

Spaceship is a low commission marketplace not a broker. Your responsibility is to understand the platform and conduct deals accordingly. The negotiation of a sale includes negotiating on how payment will be made. You've negotiated a $2,700 deal with a buyer who can't afford to pay $2,700!

Spaceship's support team should not have been involved in the deal until after payment had been made. Spaceship cannot negotiate on your behalf and cannot rescue a deal that cannot complete. Spaceship tried to help you by advising you of their lease-to-own feature but that is still your responsibility to negotiate that with the buyer. Lease-to-own is not equivalent to split payments.

Unfortunately, you agreed to a sale with a buyer who could not pay. The marketplace you chose was irrelevant, negotiating via Afternic would have had the same outcome, as would using NamePros or Escrow.com or Sedo or... sp on and so forth.

For the future: when you start negotiating with a buyer, you need to keep in mind that payment is an important part of how a deal will complete. Are they an executive of a cash-rich business? Are they a low-level employee without authorization to spend? Are they a regular person who has never bought a domain before? If your buyer is a regular person, not an expert in domains, you are going to need to walk them through everything.

The moral of the story is that negotiation is much more than just sending numbers back and forth. You need to understand your buyer. A buyer that is exceeding the maximum they want to spend is party to a very fragile deal. Convincing a buyer to agree to an amount that they aren't comfortable with all but guarantees the deal will fall apart. You have to treat these sorts of deals with kid gloves, like you're teaching a child how to handle a boiling hot pot. A single wrong move and someone is getting burned.

If you don't feel comfortable negotiating like this, then you need a broker. Switch back to Afternic and use their brokerage service instead. The commission they take is very reasonable if you need a broker.

Perhaps you're right about the buyer's profile. Also, the buyer wasn't being forthright about his demands. He didn't mention anything about LTOs when he accepted my counter-offer.

The issue isn't about Spaceship brokering for me. It's about them not being clear and objective in their messaging viz. buyer and seller.

Instead of cancelling the deal twice and/or sending emails with strong negative messaging, they could have simply merged the previous offer with the new one. FYI, I've already concluded such deals involving negotiations on Spaceship in the past. But, this one had a weird set of demands from the buyer which he added retrospectively. Maybe, he was already maxed out.

I have already been using Afternic landers for a while BTW.
 
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We came across two buyers, whose IP addresses were from India and who showed false sincerity.
 
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That's too bad that Spaceship isn't set up for payment plans. They should have just said so instead of leaving you guys in limbo. I probably would have replied on the second negotiation something like "I don't know why payment plans are so hard here. All of my domains are listed on Afternic and it's not that hard there" -- I wouldn't normally try to screw my trading partner but they clearly didn't know their system can't do payment plans but were expecting you guys to magic that out.
 
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I assumed since Spaceship didn't suggest it, that it wasn't available. I don't usually offer them myself and my Spaceship domains are BIN.
 
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