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Y'all wanna shoot the moon?

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Do you know how to shoot the moon?

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Rob Monster

Founder of EpikTop Member
Epik Founder
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ICYMI, during October, Epik sold 3 domains above $250,000.

In the interest of helping folks sell more domains for bigger money, I want to share openly what I think works pretty well when responding to retail inquiries.

Here are my two go-to response templates for answering inbound inquiries:

Template #1

Hello <firstname>,

Thanks for the inquiry.

Names of this caliber routinely sell for over $100,000.

We also sometimes do domain leases with a purchase option.

If you have budget, I will do my best to get something done for you.

Happy to advise.

Regards,
Rob




Template #2

Hello <firstname>,

Thanks for the inquiry.

You are probably looking at well into 5 figures USD for this domain.

Alternatively, it is likely possible to do a lease with a purchase option or seller-finance.

Depending on your budget, happy to advise.

Regards,
Rob



Obviously, if you have some specific comment about the domain or about the person inquiring about the prospect, that can be helpful, but usually this is a great way to just see how high is up.

During October, we saw a 2 word domain sell for $253,750. By most standards, this domain was absolutely nothing special. The domain was however strategic to the buyer.

A lot of purchase prospects end up becoming leases and financings, depending on the budget situation of the buyer. The point is to never underestimate how high is up. It is much better to: Shoot the moon!

And now you know!
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
@Rob Monster thanks for sharing this! I could have used this not too long ago I responded to an offer with “Only entertaining 5 figures and up”. I forgot to even leave a line about leasing options. Also the way you close it, is much more inviting. I like it.

I will try this next time.

Thanks
 
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During October, we saw a 2 word domain sell for $253,750. By most standards, this domain was absolutely nothing special. The domain was however strategic to the buyer.

Hello Rob. Thank you for the domain report sales, and for the response templates for answering inbound inquiries.

Did they pay the $253,750 in one payment, or it was a lease with a purchase option? Thanks
 
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@Rob Monster thanks for sharing this! I could have used this not too long ago I responded to an offer with “Only entertaining 5 figures and up”. I forgot to even leave a line about leasing options. Also the way you close it, is much more inviting. I like it.

I will try this next time.

Thanks


Right, the point is that you are not selling a domain, you are selling a solution to the person's problem. You are presumably not just a domain owner, but also a subject matter expert on domaining. So, if they will engage the dialog, you can:

- Sell them your name
- Lease or finance them your name
- Find out their exact objectives and flip them someone else's name for a profit
- Make a new friend who knows you are a subject matter expert

No hard sell. Consultative advice.

A lot of folks are a fan of Sandler method of selling. I am not because it comes across as trite and canned. Forget method selling. Just be authentic about getting to the win-win.
 
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Hello Rob. Thank you for the domain report sales, and for the response templates for answering inbound inquiries.

Did they pay the $253,750 in one payment, or it was a lease with a purchase option? Thanks

One transaction. Wire transfer.
 
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One transaction. Wire transfer.

Amazing sale. Congratulations for the sales and for how you manage those inbounds!

And thank you too for this quote. Your tips are really appreciated!

Right, the point is that you are not selling a domain, you are selling a solution to the person's problem. You are presumably not just a domain owner, but also a subject matter expert on domaining. So, if they will engage the dialog, you can:

- Sell them your name
- Lease or finance them your name
- Find out their exact objectives and flip them someone else's name for a profit
- Make a new friend who knows you are a subject matter expert

No hard sell. Consultative advice.

A lot of folks are a fan of Sandler method of selling. I am not because it comes across as trite and canned. Forget method selling. Just be authentic about getting to the win-win.
 
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Business Model #1

Ask crazy high prices, sell a domain here or there maybe.
The Mike Mann model.

Business Model #2

Selling domains consistently for great returns.

I like the second model a lot better. It is far more repeatable for the average domain investor.
The amount of great offers you need to turn down to get a ridiculous one is a lot.

Brad
 
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During October, we saw a 2 word domain sell for $253,750. By most standards, this domain was absolutely nothing special. The domain was however strategic to the buyer.
So we never know which domain name is special to others?
 
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So we never know which domain name is special to others?

upload_2019-11-5_20-15-6.png
 
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Business Model #1

Ask crazy high prices, sell a domain here or there maybe.
The Mike Mann model.

Business Model #2

Selling domains consistently for great returns.

I like the second model a lot better. It is far more repeatable for the average domain investor.
The amount of great offers you need to turn down to get a ridiculous one is a lot.

Brad

Try reading next time. What did I say?

I just did a deal tonight -- asking price was $625,000. The buyer will lease for $3500 per month with a purchase option at $625,000. I led with the buy now but closed with lease/option.

You have options -- use all the tools in your toolbox and see if you can retire a little earlier so you can go work on your ..... CALLING:

https://www.namepros.com/threads/so...t-do-domain-names-have-to-do-with-it.1161411/
 
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Business Model #1

Ask crazy high prices, sell a domain here or there maybe.
The Mike Mann model.

Business Model #2

Selling domains consistently for great returns.

I like the second model a lot better. It is far more repeatable for the average domain investor.
The amount of great offers you need to turn down to get a ridiculous one is a lot.

Brad

#1 actually sounds more like Rick to me. Where I don't read about everyday sales from him but he has some real big ones from time to time. Mann sells domains every day, like 20 or so, average in the low x,xxx but also has some big ones in the mix. Like a baseball player that has a career. Consistently hits singles with some home runs from time to time.

example..

Domains sold so far today - 15
Average sale price $3,065
Total sales $45,983
Average purchase price $24
Total purchase price $364
Total margin $45,618
https://twitter.com/mikemanndotcom/status/1164365269273337856
-------------
Side note, it would be nice if some of these big sales actually had domain names attached to them. It's even a minimum here in the Domains Sold thread.
 
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ICYMI, during October, Epik sold 3 domains above $250,000. We are getting reasonably good at qualifying leads and then backing prospects into leases and financings if they cannot afford to buy the domain.

Recently we began doing this for client domains, notably for clients who are too busy, are traveling, don't care to manage their inquiries, or who just don't feel confident handing responses.

We also hired our first domain broker, John Velinov, @Domain1031 and will shortly announce a Domain Broker Network in development following the acquisition of NameBrokers.com from Troy Rushton.

Try reading next time. What did I say?

I just did a deal tonight -- asking price was $625,000. The buyer will lease for $3500 per month with a purchase option at $625,000. I led with the buy now but closed with lease/option.

You have options -- use all the tools in your toolbox and see if you can retire a little earlier so you can go work on your ..... CALLING:

https://www.namepros.com/threads/so...t-do-domain-names-have-to-do-with-it.1161411/

Cool story.

This seems like another thread that is just an obvious promotion for Epik and their services.

Brad
 
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Cool story.

This seems like another thread that is just an obvious promotion for Epik and their services.

Brad

I am sharing what works so that others can scale it.

If you want desperate sellers with weak hands to undercut you with cheap inventory, that's fine. I rather make the pie a lot bigger by teaching people to:

1. Price for value not for cost

2. Provide flexible financing for those who need it.


The result is:

1. Windfall incomes now and then

2. Recurring income from leases.


Ask @DanSanchez about it. He went from being a weak-handed seller to being strong-handed with a single lease of a 2-word domain that covers his monthly nut just from monthly leasing income on one domain.

Yeah, Brad, I make this stuff up. Sure I do. Please stop teaching people to play yesterday's hits. With all due respect, CPC is about as current as that disco ball in the attic.
 
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Yeah, Brad, I make this stuff up. Sure I do. Please stop teaching people to play yesterday's hits. With all due respect, CPC is about as current as that disco ball in the attic.

CPC as in cost per click? When did I ever say anything about that?

1.) Buy domains.
2.) Sell domains.
3.) Reinvest.
4.) Repeat.

I have been passively selling domains to end users for over a decade successfully, but thanks for all your helpful advice :)

Brad
 
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CPC as in cost per click? When did I ever say anything about that?

1.) Buy domains.
2.) Sell domains.
3.) Reinvest.
4.) Repeat.

I have been passively selling domains to end users for over a decade successfully, but thanks for all your helpful advice :)

Brad

And that is totally cool and great. I know you have great names. I am just saying that you might be leaving a bunch on the table. However, if it ain't broke, you don't have to fix it. I am sharing what is working for me and it is also working for some other folks who I am helping to close deals that they did not think they could close. Most folks who shoot the moon are not teaching others. I can guarantee you that there are a bunch of folks doing it but they don't want to teach you because they want to outbid you in the drop auctions.
 
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Business Model #1

Ask crazy high prices, sell a domain here or there maybe.
The Mike Mann model.

Business Model #2

Selling domains consistently for great returns.

I like the second model a lot better. It is far more repeatable for the average domain investor.
The amount of great offers you need to turn down to get a ridiculous one is a lot.

Brad

Mike Mann uses both models. Don't know if there is any science behind which ones he prices xx,xxx to xxx,xxx, but to any of us they'd look pretty random. Most of his names, though are priced $xxx to low $xxxx.
 
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And that is totally cool and great. I know you have great names. I am just saying that you might be leaving a bunch on the table. However, if it ain't broke, you don't have to fix it. I am sharing what is working for me and it is also working for some other folks who I am helping to close deals that they did not think they could close. Most folks who shoot the moon are not teaching others. I can guarantee you that there are a bunch of folks doing it but they don't want to teach you because they want to outbid you in the drop auctions.

It is true that any domain can sell for any price to the right buyer, for the right use.

If you want to ask $150K or $250K for marginal domains go ahead.
At that point it is just a numbers game, unless you have any specific intelligence on the buyer.

If you own enough domains and ask really high prices you might sell one here or there. At the same time this is more like a lottery mentality. You might never hit the big one, but pass on hundreds of great offers in the meantime.

I think the average domainer, who is struggling to even sell domains period, is likely to get unrealistic expectations.

Brad
 
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Y'all wanna shoot the moon?

Yes this is fine if you have other income options . I dont have that option and need to sell domains at times just to put food on the table .
 
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@bmugford and @Rob Monster .. you both aren't right or wrong .. both types of strategies can work depending on the specific domains.

All that said .. it's never a good idea to base your choice off of just a few reported sales .. we don't know the size or quality of Mike Mann's portfolio (or is that public?), nor Rick's .. nor Rob's or Brad's for that matter .. lol.

So nobody can really judge a strategy a success or failure without knowing all the details of the entire portfolio.

That being said .. congrats on the sale big Rob! :)

More importantly .. thanks for the email templates .. one of the biggest obstacles that makes domainers not reach out to people, is the fear of getting it wrong. I've used genuine and strategic methods to close sales .. the most important thing is trying to figure out who the buyer is ... but given lack of enough information, I tend to the nice-guy genuine win-win approach! :)
 
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Thank you for the discussion guys, because this one is worth to be read a few times, at least for me :)
 
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All that said .. it's never a good idea to base your choice off of just a few reported sales .. we don't know the size or quality of Mike Mann's portfolio (or is that public?),

It's public, you can go right to his site and download the names. He's been putting info/sales out there for many years. I used to keep track of it to study the model. It's why any time we have these Mike Mann threads, is he making money, does his model work. Yes, very easy to show the math on it. See example above from his tweet.

Let me give you the very short version, there are other posts where there are more details. He liked one of those posts where I went thru it, plus again, I did the math years ago but generally:

300,000 names x 8.50 renewal = $2,550,000 a year

$20,000 a day in sales = $7,300,000 a year

$4,750,000 left after renewals. For new buys and other expenses.
 
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It's public, you can go right to his site and download the names. He's been putting info/sales out there for many years. I used to keep track of it to study the model. It's why any time we have these Mike Mann threads, is he making money, does his model work. Yes, very easy to show the math on it. See example above from his tweet.

Let me give you the very short version, there are other posts where there are more details. He liked one of those posts where I went thru it, plus again, I did the math years ago but generally:

300,000 names x 8.50 renewal = $2,550,000 a year

$20,000 a day in sales = $7,300,000 a year

$4,750,000 left after renewals. For new buys and other expenses.
Yes, Mike Mann is around 350K names. He regularly does state around $60k in daily sales. Obviously outliers like Aptum.com for $95k, cryptoworld.com $195k, acehandymanservices.com for $29888 don’t hurt.

Take into account some of his portfolio includes names he purchased over a decade ago for 4-5 figures that sell over time, another good portion is reg fee also.

His bottom line I have no idea, but it would be a great study, as it is such a diverse portfolio built over time.
 
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It is true that any domain can sell for any price to the right buyer, for the right use.

If you want to ask $150K or $250K for marginal domains go ahead.
At that point it is just a numbers game, unless you have any specific intelligence on the buyer.

If you own enough domains and ask really high prices you might sell one here or there. At the same time this is more like a lottery mentality. You might never hit the big one, but pass on hundreds of great offers in the meantime.

I think the average domainer, who is struggling to even sell domains period, is likely to get unrealistic expectations.

Brad

Well, I do try to not buy marginal names.

As for missing out, I think my template does invite discussion, and if you don't get a reply then within 48 hours you can always chase it with a more timid inquiry, "Just checking in -- anything further to discuss here?". And then you find out what they think. I am sharing what I find works. Perhaps it works for others. It works for me and for the clients who let me sell their inventory.
 
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Y'all wanna shoot the moon?

Yes this is fine if you have other income options . I dont have that option and need to sell domains at times just to put food on the table .

And that is fine.

Sell what you need to sell to feed the family. I am talking about your INBOUND inquiries.
 
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Yes, Mike Mann is around 350K names. He regularly doesn’t state around $60k in daily sales. Obviously outliers like Aptum.com for $95k, cryptoworld.com $195k, acehandymanservices.com for $29888 don’t hurt.

Take into account some of his portfolio includes names he purchased over a decade ago for 4-5 figures that sell over time, another good portion is reg fee also.

His bottom line I have no idea, but it would be a great study, as it is such a diverse portfolio built over time.

Yep, I guess 350k now, couple of years ago, there is a past post of 300k.

When I first started, my first few years, I literally kept a text document and kept track of them daily. He's very open with the sales, on Facebook/Twitter. I would take a month, average it out, that's where the $20,000 day amount came from. So once you get that and you know how many domains he has, then the math/model is easy to figure out. What was interesting to me at the time, was the average amount, low x,xxx

So:
low x,xxx sales = singles
those big sales he gets sometimes, like a $70,000 sale or something = home runs and I'm sure doubles and triples in the mix.
 
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