Domain names for sale Valuation Model
Follow the steps below, roughly in order. Each step should help you get closer and closer to a value for a great domain names ! This domain valuation model is equal parts experience from appraising professionally, and common sense. This model has been reduced to 4 steps. By no means is it perfect and it has always been shaped by comments and suggestions and the changing market.
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(- STEP 1 -) Research It!
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A) Identification of great domain names for sale
identifying a domain name in these terms will help you establish a basis on which to further appraise the name.
1.
"Industry-Related and Common Domain Names"
This shows what points an appraiser needs to keep in mind if they identify a domain name as belonging to a particular industry, (or a particular product or service). Nearly all "recognizable" entities can be placed in an industry of some sort. If the Domain Name is not involved in some industry in some way, refer to section 2.
2.
"Non-Industry-Related and Uncommon Domain Names"
This applies to "all other" domain names. Ones which cannot be either understood, indentified, or do not belong in any industry which is involved in any kind of commerce. These names generally
- do not sound like anything we know or understand
- are a phrase that makes no sense, or very little
- are phrases that are uncommon, or have no outright identifiable commercial value.
B) Recent Domain Name Sales:
Perhaps one of the most important metrics you can use to get a good foundation on which to flesh out an appraisal is the recent sales. (The only problem is getting your hands on this data. Generally sites like afternic.com publicly display sales, but these are mostly quick sales or low-cap sales. The mid-cap sales [10K - 75K roughly] are the hardest to track because they happen in private. High cap sales also can happen offline, but sometimes get great media attention and therefore are more trackable. For any group of appraisers you would need at least one full-time "researcher" who is hunting down sales data and tracking important changes in the market.) One thing to remember is that there is rarely information that cannot be bought.
C) Industry:
In some cases, the potential value will be extremely obvious. In most cases, however, you will need to research the value of the industry in which the domain name falls, if it is a recognizable domain name.
1. Industry history, trends and potential: Real Estate... is it booming this year?
2. Commerce potential: Just what does history show about how well these things sell?
What is the collective value of the industry your domain name belongs to?
D). Availability:
Saturation of Domain Names within this industry
How many domain names pertaining to the one being appraised:
1. Are for sale on the aftermarket
2. Have been registered
3. Have not been registered yet
Answers to these three questions give appraisers a reference point for just how popular registration in a particular industry is.
E) Other:
1. Country of Origin
Where is your name from and what language is it in? (spelling, etc..)
2. Ratings
- Violence or intent to disturb
- Adult domains which include graphic content
- Race or hatred names
- Names that Infringe in Trademarks
3. Bids and Development:
Is this domain developed or has it received bids already? (if it has received SERIOUS bids, then you already know the least it could sell for.. trouble is telling which ones are serious or not!)
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(- STEP 2 -) Anaylize It!
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********** Characters **********
As "forsalebyowner" showed us, you can't always judge a name by its length but compare it to DAutos.com .
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1-5 Char. = Optimal
6-10 Char. =
11-16 Char. = Less attractive without a solid idea
17-25 Char. =
26 + Char. = Generally past the pain threshold of typing in a name.
********** Extension **********
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Most Attractive Extension currently:
.COM
Newcomers which offer the most commercial promise:
.TV, .FM
Extensions which have potential but have yet to be proven:
.CC, .WS, .VC, .TO
Extensions which have proven to be lower in value than .com (from 10% to 90% lower)
.NET, .ORG, .CO.UK, and ALL country .TLD's
Extensions which are not generally for sale
.MD, .EDU, .GOV
NEW ICANN Chosen Extensions with undetermined values.
.SHOP, .WEB, .STORE, .SEX, .???
(These can be appraised with comaparative anaylsis, but keep in mind they may not even exist)
**********Spelling**********
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Alteration ("skool"): (can be used and do sell)
Incorrect spelling: (difficult to sell)
Hard to spell: (Retains a good amount of value)
**********Alterations and themes**********
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"Tricks" (h0use, scho0l): (Can and do sell)
"Modifications on success" (example: OnSaleByOwner vs. ForSalebyOwner): These have had somewhat of a hard time selling because the brands they are modifying have taken years, or decades to build!
**********Confusion variables**********
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1. Vitaminshoppe.com vs. vitaminshop.com (when you need to TELL someone how to spell it): (Depends on Who came first and Trademark issues)
2. TO vs 2 and easy vs. EZ (when you need to tell someone which one it is): Do you have both iterations? Depends also on who came first, etc...
**********Hyphens**********
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0 Hyphens: Best
1 Hyphen: Retains some Value *subtract 30-50%
2 Hyphens: Very Difficult to sell *Subtract 60-75%
**********Prefixes and Suffixes**********
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Popular prefixes and suffixes can have either a positive or negative effect.
One Character Prefixes:
1. None at all
2. e
3. i
4. v, u
5. d, b, x
6. Others
Multi-Character Prefixes
1. Buy, shop, sell (and others related to selling)
2. web, internet (and others related to the www)
3. cyber, virtual, domain
4. Others (email
[email protected] to add yours!)
(by, at, for, of)
Even if the prefix is not on the list, remember that it is more important the the prefix is understandable and is being used to help the domain name somehow, or it is is being used for marketing purposes.
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(- STEP 3 -) Market-Test It!
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1). Brandability:
Can you sell it? Is the name brandable? (even names that sound "funky" have some serious value due to branding potential. This is an important and very subjective factor: consider chumbo.com or kosmo.com)
2). Marketability:
(Who will buy it: Do you know Market segment buying habits? - If you have a great domain name like FIberOptics.com, what are the chances that someone will buy it? Well it can help to look at the market you are selling to: in this case your best bet is the industry itself: sell to fiberoptics companies) Within the industry who are the most likely buyers and how does that helped/hurt the chances of you selling a domain?
3). Memorability: will people remember it?
(This is certainly tied to brandability: but its a measure of how often you repeat it in your head or if you say it to your friends: for example, PhoneCentral.com is more memorable than Phones24by7.com)
4). The Look Test: -Take a look at your domain... does it read well? Would it look good in a magazine or on a bus? Do the letters look nice? are there three "s's" in a row? This is perhaps the most subjective.. but there are always things the majority of people will agree on.
5.) Time Sensitivity: example: Pokemon, Themes that lose value quickly. Is yours destined to fall by the wayside anytime soon?
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(- STEP 4 -) Value It!
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This will also include the percentages of domains that fall into that range.
First Select a Category, then a range within that category. Ideally this should be based on Domain Name Sales, and updated frequently.
Category 1 - Cream of the Crop
*.15% Belong* - $500,000 - $5,000,000+
(1%: $5,000,000 +)
(25%: $1,000,000 - $4,999,999)
(84%: $500,000 - $999,999)
Category 2 - Top Range
*1.5% Belong* $100,000 - $499,999

10%: $350,000 - $499,999)
(35%: $250,000 - $349,999)
(55%: $100,000 - $249,999)
Category 3 - Mid Range
*15%* Belong $30,000 - $99,999
(15%: $75,000 - $99,999)
(15%: $55,000 - $74,999)
(70%: $30,000 - $54,999)
Category 4 - Bottom Range
*83.65% Belong* $0 - $29,999
(10%: $15,000 - $29,999)
(20%: $9,000 - $14,999)
(70%: $0 - $8,999)
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Note:
This model is a bit different in that is not really just a model. It is more of a "guide" in that it gives insight into how at least one appraiser views the process of valuating domain names. In a "model" sense, you can distill out what the industry already agrees on (.com is best, shorter is better, etc.. )
source:
buyyourself.com/business-domains-for-sale/domain-valuation.html