

i am more like an " f " kind of a student3.1415927 you get a c-
So important to remember that at time.
This kind of topic has been brought up again and again as you can see most of them are carrying registry premium renewal fees, and I don't think you didn't aware that since you've been around here so long. The sales from Swetha are all standard renewals.The gap between reseller prices and end user prices in .XYZ is quite striking.
If you look at the sales chart above it is quite amazing the quality of keyword that are selling for mid $XXX to low $X,XXX reseller prices. Several of those terms are likely (7) figures in .COM.
Though in fairness, that is how it works in most secondary extensions. I have sold some .US domains in the tens of thousands range that I purchased for (3) figures. You need the massive margin to cover for the low sell-through rate.
Brad
I don't think it's a wrong strategy to set up premium renewals for some famous words. xyz is a domain extension that was only issued in 2014, which is relatively young compared to other extensions. The domain name business is not a new industry, everyone knows car, tour are a good word, The value of the extension would be affected if it was released under standard renewal. How many failed cases are there like .biz, and the CEO knew it. This strategy is more accurate than before and more suitable as a new marketing strategyใThatโs exactly my point, extensions that charge a premium yearly fee (that is not fixed and can go up) is not really investable.
Investors donโt want them and most end-users donโt want them. So what we are seeing right now, mainly from Swetha is average or below average (hence the none premium fee) dictionary word sales in .xyz going for like $10k on average.
Fair play to her, but letโs have it right the only reason why start-ups are paying this amount, is because the .com is much more expensive and other extensions like .co/.io may already be in use or priced higher than the .xyz, not because they prefer .xyz over .com or prefer .xyz over extensions like .io/.co.
What does that have to do with what he said? Confused!!This kind of topic has been brought up again and again as you can see most of them are carrying registry premium renewal fees, and I don't think you didn't aware that since you've been around here so long. The sales from Swetha are all standard renewals.
Show attachment 214502o
What's so hard for you to understand๏ผWhat does that have to do with what he said? Confused!!
HiMay be we should create same title posts with fake ID's.
like
.Com is Scam
.IO is Scam
.Co is Scam
Exactly, Swetha.May be we should create same title posts with fake ID's.
like
.Com is Scam
.IO is Scam
.Co is Scam
Sure it's not a bad strategy for the people that control .xyz if people are stupid enough to pay a premium to acquire on of these domains and then pay a premium every year on top of that too to keep it, but it's not a wise investment to brand around Car dot xyz, an extension not even top 5 and unpredictable renewal fees.I don't think it's a wrong strategy to set up premium renewals for some famous words. xyz is a domain extension that was only issued in 2014, which is relatively young compared to other extensions. The domain name business is not a new industry, everyone knows car, tour are a good word, The value of the extension would be affected if it was released under standard renewal. How many failed cases are there like .biz, and the CEO knew it. This strategy is more accurate than before and more suitable as a new marketing strategyใ
For those high premium renewal domains I think its strategy is tend to focus on companies that won't think spending on it is a big deal, in registry's thought, it is likely reserved in best scenario for famous companies to adopt them for promotional purpose.Sure it's not a bad strategy for the people that control .xyz if people are stupid enough to pay a premium to acquire on of these domains and then pay a premium every year on top of that too to keep it, but it's not a wise investment to brand around Car dot xyz, an extension not even top 5 and unpredictable renewal fees.
People know this, hence Car dot xyz low price and will no doubt keep selling for around that price ($10k and under).
He says that end user sales and reseller prices are far apart and then you began an inane ramble about premium renewals.What's so hard for you to understand๏ผ
because that's the reason causing it happened the different scenario with .us he mentioned, can't you just be a little bit forward thinking?He says that end user sales and reseller prices are far apart and then you began an inane ramble about premium renewals.
Can't you be a scintilla less rude?because that's the reason causing it happened the different scenario with .us he mentioned, can't you just be a little bit forward thinking?
This is an eye-opening perspective on what extensions tech companies are going with, I went through the first 1500 and only found 12 with xyz. The data doesn't reflect what a lot of articles keep saying about xyz being the fan favorite for tech, metaverse, crypto etc. Thanks for sharing.Seems like more crypto sites are using .network, .io or .finance than xyz from what I've been seeing
Eg https://golden.com/query/list-of-cryptocurrency-companies-E5Y
xyz is meant to be famous on web3
Well, I considered it's an eye-closing perspective.This is an eye-opening perspective on what extensions tech companies are going with, I went through the first 1500 and only found 12 with xyz. The data doesn't reflect what a lot of articles keep saying about xyz being the fan favorite for tech, metaverse, crypto etc. Thanks for sharing.
Hipushing the extension using this argument is nonsense.
seems you don't understand what gives a domain extension value. The global adoption rate of an domain extension is from its reputation, you could say that the function of all domain names are the same, but a large value derived from its image, .com is famous because it issued earlier and carried with good meaning(company, commercial etc.) nothing more, HNS allows you to create a domain extension does that mean the fame of the extension itself depends on adopters's own promotion? This largely limits its potential in value, which is an adverse condition to domainers, I am not saying HNS is bad, on the contrary I think HNS is a good project but as an investor's point of view it just needed to wait longer.I noticed people bringing up this argument a lot. I fail to see how .XYZ would give a company a significant advantage in web3.
Let's cut the crap. Web 3 has absolutely nothing to do with domain extensions. It's about the tech behind it and the way it works.
Now... there are obviously handshake extensions, pretty cool, but XYZ is no part of that.
When the time comes the layman will generally accept (let alone understand the concept of) web3, getting in on the decentralised web, they will prefer what's familiar to them. That's .com, ccTLD.
They're all just tlds, like XYZ. Technically not a single difference. So again, how does that make XYZ web3? It's just a narrative pushed by a certain crowd ignoring facts and reality.
Web3 enthusiasts and related companies may like the extension, don't mind adopting it, but ultimately: pushing the extension using this argument is nonsense.



