Close Your Forum Sales Threads

I don’t list many domain names for sale on domain forums, but I think they can be good venues to sell domain names that are priced well. I’ve bought and sold on DNForum, NamePros, and Domain Boardroom, so I know first hand that all of the forums have active buyers and sellers. Sellers may outnumber buyers, but there are many buyers looking for deals on forums.

Sometimes, I’ll list a domain name for sale and reduce the price once if the domain name isn’t sold. On occasion, if I don’t want to reduce the price, I’ll simply edit the post and remove the information from the sale thread so nobody contacts me about it after. Oftentimes, I’ll forget about the sale listing, and it will stay up indefinitely, and therein lies a problem.

If someone does a bit of cursory research to buy a specific domain name, they can easily find information like previous sale prices as well as sale listings on domain forums. If you listed a domain name for sale at a reduced price and don’t edit the listing, you could end up selling the domain name for less than its retail value.

While there should be no regrets on a domain sale, nobody wants to sell their name for less than they could sell it. Edit your  listings if you don’t want the sale price to be listed indefinitely.

If you forget to edit a listing and someone wants to buy it you might try to tell the buyer that your listing is 6 months old and is no longer valid, but someone who really wants your domain name at the listed price may take exception to that and make a legal case out of it.

You wouldn’t want to try and buy something for its listed price only to find that the seller won’t follow through on the transaction. It’s much easier just to edit your listing a week or two after it doesn’t have any buyers.

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

4 COMMENTS

  1. Some loon contacted me last year, demanding to buy a domain that I listed on DNF in 2004 with a $50 BIN. When I quoted a $3000 price he got very upset.

    There is no contractual obligation to sell a listed domain outside a 30 day maximum, and that’s debatable even .

    While I agree that old threads should be closed, there is always a reason to add to or edit an old thread – despite obvious references to ‘tomb raiding’ an ancient thread. 😀

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Recent Posts

Negotiate an Inbound Lead via Broker

5
Successfully negotiating a deal is something I enjoy. The negotiation is an important aspect of why I find domain investing to be exhilarating. It...

Candidate Gets Flack for Old Domain Investments

5
When I read about domain names being involved in a political campaign, it is usually because one candidate bought a domain name related to...

Pepe.com Acquired by Pepe Coin ($PEPE)

3
Pepe is a popular meme coin ($PEPE) that has been using the Pepe.vip domain name for its website. According to Binance, Pepe is trading...

FedEx Buys Its 3 Letter .com Ticker Symbol

0
It looks like FedEx has acquired a valuable 3 letter .com domain name. Whois records show FedEx is now the owner of FDX.com. The...

Squadhelp Rebrands as Atom with Atom.com

7
Squadhelp announced a complete rebrand this morning. The company is now known as Atom, and it acquired the Atom.com domain name in advance of...