Hi everyone.
I have decided to dip my foot into the water and advertise a few domains on Go Daddy.
As I explained in another post I know I have made some classical beginners mistakes and bought some domains based on Esibot values. Looking back I would advise any newbie to spend 6 months researching and reading before spending a penny. Still there's no point in crying over spilt milk as my mother used to say.
So I have put these on a 7 day Go Daddy auction.
Laptop8.com ... Esibot value $680 - My asking price £34
Laptop10.com ... Esibot value $540 - My asking price £69
Roulett.co ... Esibot value $4,700 - My asking price £69
Speakersforcomputers.com ... Esibot value $2000 - My asking price £34
Japanese-beer.com ... Esibot value $590 - My asking price £14
Computers-laptops.com ... Esibot value $2,800 - My asking price £69
Beermonster.co ... Esibot $190 - My asking price £14
Carparts.io ... Esibot value $2,700 - Very small reserve on a Flippa thirty day auction.
Do you think my appraisal values are OK or to greedy ? I am aware that most or all will not sell - However we all have to start somewhere and learn from our mistakes
One more question. I am going to list these soon.
Roses.io ... Esibot value $6,300 - I have not advertised this yet but it will be my next Flippa auction. I think no reserve win or lose ?
The same goes for sheds.io / desktopcomputers.io / swt.io
Any sort of appraisal values or reserve ? My gut feeling is to take a punt on a no reserve auction win or lose ? If one of these does OK and covers some, or all, of the registration costs then happy days. I enjoy doing this and I am sure in time I will do OK when I have learnt a lot more about this business. My feeling is that drop catching is the way forward but that's another thread another day.
Any advice from you will be very helpful. I really appreciate your comments good or bad - It really is the best way to learn and move forward.
Like I say this is just testing the waters rather than trying to make a load of wonga (for now).
Thanks in advance for any appraisal.
Best,
Paul
I have decided to dip my foot into the water and advertise a few domains on Go Daddy.
As I explained in another post I know I have made some classical beginners mistakes and bought some domains based on Esibot values. Looking back I would advise any newbie to spend 6 months researching and reading before spending a penny. Still there's no point in crying over spilt milk as my mother used to say.
So I have put these on a 7 day Go Daddy auction.
Laptop8.com ... Esibot value $680 - My asking price £34
Laptop10.com ... Esibot value $540 - My asking price £69
Roulett.co ... Esibot value $4,700 - My asking price £69
Speakersforcomputers.com ... Esibot value $2000 - My asking price £34
Japanese-beer.com ... Esibot value $590 - My asking price £14
Computers-laptops.com ... Esibot value $2,800 - My asking price £69
Beermonster.co ... Esibot $190 - My asking price £14
Carparts.io ... Esibot value $2,700 - Very small reserve on a Flippa thirty day auction.
Do you think my appraisal values are OK or to greedy ? I am aware that most or all will not sell - However we all have to start somewhere and learn from our mistakes
One more question. I am going to list these soon.
Roses.io ... Esibot value $6,300 - I have not advertised this yet but it will be my next Flippa auction. I think no reserve win or lose ?
The same goes for sheds.io / desktopcomputers.io / swt.io
Any sort of appraisal values or reserve ? My gut feeling is to take a punt on a no reserve auction win or lose ? If one of these does OK and covers some, or all, of the registration costs then happy days. I enjoy doing this and I am sure in time I will do OK when I have learnt a lot more about this business. My feeling is that drop catching is the way forward but that's another thread another day.
Any advice from you will be very helpful. I really appreciate your comments good or bad - It really is the best way to learn and move forward.
Like I say this is just testing the waters rather than trying to make a load of wonga (for now).
Thanks in advance for any appraisal.
Best,
Paul




