

scandiman said:A non-domainer. If you had bank.com and sold it to a bank then you sold it to an end user.
commes said:Oh ok, now i get it. Then is there a sepcific term for someone that has domains already? Or would they jsut be called a developer?
True.BinderGang said:I wouldn't say a non-domainer. I have a few domains I'll never sell. I am those domains end user.
Your getting the picture.commes said:Oh so end-users are generally better as they've obviously been looking for that specific domain, or something similar to it, as it has a lot do with their company. So for instance, google.com is owned by an end-user because they have developed it and dont plan on selling it. Am i right, or am i still confused about the term?:lol:
commes said:Oh so end-users are generally better as they've obviously been looking for that specific domain, or something similar to it, as it has a lot do with their company. So for instance, google.com is owned by an end-user because they have developed it and dont plan on selling it. Am i right, or am i still confused about the term?:lol:
hugegrowth said:wow, we are all over this post in minutes!



