Afternic Should Better Explain Broker Communication Process

My Afternic Lead Center is full of Stalled, Qualifying, Confused, and Unknown leads. As a domain investor, this is pretty confusing and slightly frustrating. I don’t blame Afternic brokers for this because I have become familiar with how their platform works, but I do think Afternic and GoDaddy should better educate its sellers on the brokerage process.

When a prospective buyer submits an offer or inquiry, I am pretty certain they quickly receive an automated email with information about the domain name and a broker contact. The Afternic broker will follow up various times via email and a phone call if they have the correct phone number. Afternic brokers earn a living on commissions, so they have a vested interest in selling domain names.

I think sellers may not really understand that many of the inbound leads aren’t genuine or qualified buyers. There are many buyers who are confused and have no idea they are submitting a domain name purchase inquiry. Perhaps they don’t speak the language of the inquiry or are trying to access a website on the incorrect domain name. I deal with this on many of the inbound inquiries I handle for my domain names via Embrace.com. To me, it seems pretty clear they are submitting a purchase inquiry/offer, yet here they are trying to get an answer to something totally unrelated.

Other prospects who submit an offer or inquiry may genuinely want to buy a domain name but don’t have the required budget. Someone might submit a $5,000 offer that I set as my Minimum Offer, but they only have a $200 budget and submitted the lowest offer the platform would allow to be seen. It appears they made a $5,000 offer but can really only pay $200 and just wanted their offer to be seen.

I don’t need Afternic brokers informing me about offers that were made that are below my minimum. It’s a waste of their time and mine. However, from the seller’s perspective, they may see a lead in their Lead Center and it’s listed as “Stalled” within a short time. Without additional commentary, this is confusing and may make the broker appear lazy or disengaged.

If I hadn’t learned about how the Afternic broker communication process works, I might be concerned about Afternic brokers handling my leads. I like managing my own leads because it can cut down on the time to communicate with a prospective buyer. This can be helpful if a prospect wants a name ASAP and sleeping on the decision could result in a lost deal. However, I am also pretty sure Afternic brokers are better at sales than I am, and they have a vested interest in getting a deal done.

I think GoDaddy and Afternic need to do a better job of communicating how their brokering process works, and the “Status” section of the Lead Center could be more detailed. This would likely give sellers more confidence in the brokers handling leads.

Elliot Silver
Elliot Silver
About The Author: Elliot Silver is an Internet entrepreneur and publisher of DomainInvesting.com. Elliot is also the founder and President of Top Notch Domains, LLC, a company that has closed eight figures in deals. Please read the DomainInvesting.com Terms of Use page for additional information about the publisher, website comment policy, disclosures, and conflicts of interest. Reach out to Elliot: Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn

6 COMMENTS

  1. Makes sense Elliot. I agree the buyer many times appears to be confused – and in doing so wastes a brokers time.

    But that said I did a lower 5-digit deal last year on a domain the buyer made no initial offer even though the minimum offer was $10,000 USD.

    As far as auto responses – to date I think I only have one auto response on my afternic seller account. I dont know what that means – good or bad.,

    DOT COM interest is a reflaction of small business making a run in this economy again.
    Meaning on Afternic, I am getting increased interest (Inquiries) but with low offers – but at least there is a pulse realizing you Cant squeeze water out of a rock.

    on another note i see where BUENA.COM ownership changed hands – I would imagine congrats are in order on that Elliot !!!
    bri

  2. Yes – DAN is part of the godaddy world.
    But if the likely naive buyer Elliot mentions wants a domain – they have no clue who or what DAN is and they just go to GoDaddy and search for that domain.
    What does listing a domain at DAN vs. afternic benefit anybody.

  3. I think Godaddy should be the same as before; now he’s managing everything at Afternic.
    I previously listed a domain through Afternic with the Afternic link and landing page. Now it’s just Godaddy with a form in Spanish, so the buyer doesn’t know the asking price for the domain I’m selling with ns1.afternic.com and ns2.afternic.com in my Godaddy.com and Dynadot.com customer accounts.

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