Can anybody throw some light on this one:- does domain name's value increases with time , please suggest all possibilities.
thanks
thanks


domainspade said:If I read this post correctly, it appears your asking if Domain Names value increases with time? (not the page rank).
The answer is of course. As the internet continues to boom and become the largest marketplace in the world domain names will absolutely go up in value. especially in areas that begin to take off.
For Example:
Templates.com
This domain (my numbers may be somewhat off, forgive me) sold for around $40,000 about 2 years ago. It re-sold this year for $450,000
(I appologize if my numbers are off, but I believe these prices to be close and im too lazy right now to go verify)
Domains as a whole have also seen quite a bit of growth. As this market heats up and attracts new "domainers" the value of domains will rise as demand increases and supply decreases. This simply basic principle will insure that a smart investment made today, will absolutely gain value in the future.
The answer to your question is yes or I wouldnt be doing this!
kahsoon said:But one thing I'm concern is how accurate is the report? I mean since it is a private sale.
Keyword rich is not natural keyword usage? I use keywords as much as I can use keywords. I even misspell keewords or break up key words so the SEs know what my keyword is.Josh_1 said:... do some shameless keyword stuffing (around 8% keyword density seems to have worked for me) to get ranked highly by MSN, then leverage that exposure to get publicity and traffic, and backlinks, and then after a few months rewrite the content to bring the keyword density back to resembling natural language...
accentnepal said:Keyword rich is not natural keyword usage? I use keywords as much as I can use keywords. I even misspell keewords or break up key words so the SEs know what my keyword is.
Josh_1 said:From a SEO perspective, Google ranks higher the sites that have been around for a longer time - they look for longevity, which is one mark of a good website. Of course, the longer you've been around, the more backlinks will have accumulated. Google also looks at how the backlinks appear -- thousands at once = penalty, but gradually accumulating in a natural pattern = good for SEO.
MSN search on the other hand, seems to rank highly some quite new sites as well.
One trick I've utilized successfully in the past is do some shameless keyword stuffing (around 8% keyword density seems to have worked for me) to get ranked highly by MSN, then leverage that exposure to get publicity and traffic, and backlinks, and then after a few months rewrite the content to bring the keyword density back to resembling natural language, and google will start liking it more.
I'm sure there are various theories about these things that contradict mine. I'm just saying this has worked for me. Good luck!
But I digress---


