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Level 1: A buyer wants it.From your experience, when a domain is judged as "valuable" (or suddenly not), which layer tends to dominate in real-world situations?
From your experience, when a domain is judged as "valuable" (or suddenly not), which layer tends to dominate in real-world situations?
Touché, sometimes the real valuation layer is whoever has the stronger negotiating position.
Fair enough. Until someone actually writes the check, it’s all just theory. In that sense, the buyer’s decision is the only valuation that really counts.When a buyer agrees to pay a large sum of money for it.
Thx, that’s a clean way to frame itLevel 1: A buyer wants it.
Level 2: A buyer wants to buy it.
Level 3: A buyer is worried about someone else buying it.
The sale price can go up exponentially at each level.
i like that word...2chay
I like that framing. There’s definitely a “vision premium” in this space.I've always said that we are not selling domain names, but we are selling dreams. This means that the value is in the mind of the dreamer. Sometimes this is in the mind of the seller. For example - I looked up the first name that I registered (Reel Match .com), but I let it drop fairly soon, as I didn't think it was worth the renewal fee. I see it is up for sale at a price of $39,888, and I don't understand that valuation.
