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My PM reply ended up being quite long, so I thought I would share.
A newbie wanted to know how to choose a good domain... it's not as simple as that!
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There are literally millions of people trying to make an easy buck online. I was one of the first to use AdWords for PPC affiliate ads, and I made a lot of $$$. Then my friend Chris Carpenter wrote a book about it, and everybody was doing it - it suddenly become a struggle to profit from it.
When you have 5,000 people (or whatever the number is) all trying to snatch LLL.coms for cheap, the odds are stacked against you.
Same with keyword domains - there are tools that let you find them, based on CPC and monthly searches. What domainers are paying is rarely a bargain.
I think of domaining as being like the antique business. You can't get a feel for what is a bargain antique just from reading a book about it. You need experience. Years of it.
I started 6-7 years ago and paid $xxxx for domains that I ended up not renewing. I'm still learning, still making mistakes.
Ultimately, the best domains are ones that multiple end users will one day search for and have a strong desire to purchase. End users that have the cash to buy it. My average purchase price is $100, and my average sale is $1000. But my average selling time is 20 years (I sell 5% of my portfolio each year).
Hand-regging is unlikely to make you a profit. At least expired/dropped domains had someone liking them already.
Shorter is better. .coms are by far the best.
Follow the prices / appraisals here for a year, then look for dropped/expired domains in the $50-$200 range that you think can sell for $1000+. Buy few and buy well. Then expect to wait for a sale.
A newbie wanted to know how to choose a good domain... it's not as simple as that!
------------
There are literally millions of people trying to make an easy buck online. I was one of the first to use AdWords for PPC affiliate ads, and I made a lot of $$$. Then my friend Chris Carpenter wrote a book about it, and everybody was doing it - it suddenly become a struggle to profit from it.
When you have 5,000 people (or whatever the number is) all trying to snatch LLL.coms for cheap, the odds are stacked against you.
Same with keyword domains - there are tools that let you find them, based on CPC and monthly searches. What domainers are paying is rarely a bargain.
I think of domaining as being like the antique business. You can't get a feel for what is a bargain antique just from reading a book about it. You need experience. Years of it.
I started 6-7 years ago and paid $xxxx for domains that I ended up not renewing. I'm still learning, still making mistakes.
Ultimately, the best domains are ones that multiple end users will one day search for and have a strong desire to purchase. End users that have the cash to buy it. My average purchase price is $100, and my average sale is $1000. But my average selling time is 20 years (I sell 5% of my portfolio each year).
Hand-regging is unlikely to make you a profit. At least expired/dropped domains had someone liking them already.
Shorter is better. .coms are by far the best.
Follow the prices / appraisals here for a year, then look for dropped/expired domains in the $50-$200 range that you think can sell for $1000+. Buy few and buy well. Then expect to wait for a sale.









