Appears the whole domain business bases it in the owners name and not so much about domain value. Even if you have a good domain you wont sell it if you dont have a known name in the domain business. Any agree?


I think domain name value still plays a role. A good domain name can have value even if it is held by an average person.Appears the whole domain business bases it in the owners name and not so much about domain value. Even if you have a good domain you wont sell it if you dont have a known name in the domain business. Any agree?
Appears the whole domain business bases it in the owners name and not so much about domain value. Even if you have a good domain you wont sell it if you dont have a known name in the domain business. Any agree?
There's lots of moving parts, including who the seller is. But the "whole" domain business isn't based on that though I'd imagine it plays a significant role.
They could be checking whois.
Can you list some of them?Yeah people buy from famous name owners. I have good maaaany good comains and little sales so it just shows
Even the biggest domain investors are not like well known household names.Appears the whole domain business bases it in the owners name and not so much about domain value. Even if you have a good domain you wont sell it if you dont have a known name in the domain business. Any agree?
I had many good before. Dont remember them but for example casinobingo.net I sold it only for 1K even with a website.
Who you are, high-profile sellers, have an extremely broad reach where they can cause excitement over a domain or trend they're vested into, in many ways that can give an edge on the DN's seed opportunity. It can be subtle or blatantly obvious. Perhaps the buyer forgot why they like the name, but there was a reason it's in their mind.Vast majority of retail sales happen at Afternic.
Buyer has no idea who the seller is.
High end sales often via brokers, again the buyer usually has no idea who the seller is.
Explain how this is a "significant" role.
Who you are, high-profile sellers, have an extremely broad reach where they can cause excitement over a domain or trend they're vested into, in many ways that can give an edge on the DN's seed opportunity. It can be subtle or blatantly obvious. Perhaps the buyer forgot why they like the name, but there was a reason it's in their mind.
You're right more than likely buyers don't know who the seller is, my point is in my eyes it can certainly have a significant role even if it's for related domains that the seller doesn't even own. There is the trust factor. You mentioned brokers. An owner who is known and proven in consistent good names will likely be better weighed thus worked for. There is a community within every industry. Where do you see opportunity source from? So a good name sells itself. Maybe maybe not. We tend to know who the seller was in most cases. What about the bad names? I'd say vast majority of retail sales are just that. How many will ever be used, vs just traded back and forth between investors in perpetuity. The pattern the OP was referring to (I think) is of why that is.
You might have your head in the sand.Everything you mention is much more likely to "excite" other domain investors than have any impact whatsoever on an end user.
There is zero truth to your "feeling", which goes for all feelings.Appears the whole domain business bases it in the owners name and not so much about domain value. Even if you have a good domain you wont sell it if you dont have a known name in the domain business. Any agree?
Yes but Provenance applies to objects where establishing its history is important from a legal and historic point of view and of course, it's value as a result. This is mainly for art objects, ancient artefacts and books, but also includes scientific artefacts such as dinosaur bones and fossils.It's called Provenance

