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The sell-off of Voice.com was a voluntary exchange, between Microstrategy and Block.One. There was no overpay, because there are 1,000 GTLDs that Block.One could have used (Voice.Horse anyone?), but they made the cost-benefit analysis that the Voice.com asset value iwas at least $30M for them; they made a calculation. Obviously, what a wholeseller pays for an asset or good, has little bearing on what the retail value is to the right buyer.
When you are talking about premium 1-2 word dot-Coms with commercial and/or dictionary meaning, scarcity and use plays a HUGE role in valuation.
The domain speculation industry isn't dying, its being bought out as the premium assets are finite; there are only so many 1-2 word premium dot-Coms with commercial and/or dictionary meaning to go around. For that reason, Block.One was willing to make the $30M purchase because they know more about their business than you do.
Notice the false analogy you use, "I own horse-drawings-night.network" to compare to a digital blue diamond like Voice.com. That is why Microstrategy earned $30 million, and you are stuck playing armchair domain valuation expert.
Lesson in there...![]()
ok boss, i'll make a less hyperbolic analogy. say frogs.com sold for $300 billion.
everything you are saying would also apply to that 'digital blue diamond'
you're pretending that because something is valuable, there is no such thing as an overpay. that's not how valuation works.
you are pretending there is an objective standard by which to measure the value of a premium 1-2 word dot-Com
i would say you are pretending there isn't. but yet, we seemed to have reached agreement. i think domains can be valued and you think beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
but we both know if you could afford to do it, you would not pay $30 million for voice.com. you probably wouldn't even pay $5 million for it.
Again you present a false comparison, an individual domain speculator with no plans to develop the digital asset but only to buy, hold and sell versus development for market share capture. In the Voice.com situation, the buyers are in the BOOMING crypto & mobile/digital communications industry. So what I, as a 3rd rate domain specualtor would pay is irrelevant because I'm a wholeseller not a retailer in need of the income producing asset to improve my web presence, market position and gain more sales.
Also, I don't have a $5M budget, or even $1M, so thats another theoretical argument you are making when we have the concrete evidence of the Voice.com sell for $30M and the Cars.com valuation at the SEC level of $872M.
Do you want to accept the facts as they are; or create your own false reality of how things should be because you say so?
What's wholesale price on this? My guess: $250k.
Note that this was my question. What is the wholesale value of voice.com.
Just announced!
George, I know you're pretty well respected around this industry and thanks for sharing. I'm still a relative newbie who still thinks this industry is BY FAR the most screwed up industry on the planet. Here is what I just posted on Morgan Linton's blog a few minutes ago;
"Just to show how screwed up this industry truly is, I just reg'd VoiceSynchronization.com and paid GD a whopping $8.50 for it. GD says the word "Synchronization" is valued at $2,000, "Voice" is a popular keyword, and "VoiceSynchronization" is highly memorable."
George, either I'm drunk or we're all living in the twilight zone. However, like with Donald J. Trump, the entertainment value is absolutely priceless![]()
More Money than Sense? Not knowing any of the specifics or details....could be money laundering? I'd assume the FBI is all over thisI see the sale is listed on NameBio now. So far in 2019 this one sale is $30M while the other 42,100 .com domain name sales on NameBio so far in 2019 combine for another $38.4M! A beautiful name, but this was certainly a fantastic price obtained for it.


