Home Blog Page 1333

Advice From the Most Successful Domain Owners of All Time – Part 5

18

This is part five of a series of five with one piece of advice from some of the most successful domain investors, domain developers, domain monetizers, and others involved in the domain industry. I asked them for one piece of advice they would give to a part-time domain investor looking to build his business. I believe there are quite a few people who are part time domain investors, and I also believe just about anyone involved in the industry can apply some of this advice to their own business models.

I really appreciate all of the contributions from the industry leaders who contributed, and I hope the advice contained within is helpful to you now – or will be helpful to the growth of your business in the future. As an FYI, I intentionally did not put these posts in any particular order.

If you haven’t read them yet, I recommend viewing part one, part two, part three, and part four.

Rick Latona, Rick Latona, LLC:

When I first got in the business I was a bit schizophrenic, dumping money into every venture I thought had a chance at success. I registered thousands of names, bought high-end names, sold some names cheap, held out for big money on others, started a loan company and eventually started the newsletter and auction company. It worked, only because I dumped so much cash into it. Something was bound to stick.

If I had to do it again and do it on a tight budget, it would be much different. Far too many of the things I tried failed; enough to make a grown man cry from the loss of capital. My lessons and the lessons that others are sharing in your series can help people avoid those pitfalls. You don’t have to make the same mistakes.

If I had to pick one thing, and one thing only, I’d say choose not only the battles worth winning but the battle you can win. If you think you have an idea or a line on a name you could purchase that could make a huge return, think hard on exactly what your plan is to see the light in the end. Can you win the battle? Or is it more likely you’ll be stuck in the name for a long time with no capital to develop it and no one to sell it to.

I’ve been stuck with far more assets than I care to think about. Big money is made when you can rotate your capital rapidly. It’s not enough to just buy low and sell high. You have to do it a lot. The faster you can turn the money the more money you’ll end up with at the end of a year.

People often underestimate the time-value of money. Understanding this simple theory can help you know when you are better to take an offer today or hold out for a bigger offer tomorrow. Often the bigger offer tomorrow isn’t more money at all when the time is factored into the equation.

You’ve got to know you can win the battle and win the battle in a reasonable amount of time. Have a back-up plan if you can’t. For example, these days, I rarely buy names I’m not willing to own and develop if I’m unable to flip them. I think about my father not buying land unless he can sell the timber on it to make the mortgage payment in the rare case he can’t flip the land to a developer. It’s the same thing.

Most of the names I’m stuck with are names that don’t have a clear business model to them and can’t be easily developed. I bought them just because I thought I could flip them, didn’t flip them, now its tied up capital that gets more expensive every day I hold onto them due to the time value of money.

All domainers who want to know more on this should read this book (I’ve memorized every formula inside).

Skip Hoagland, DomainsNewMedia.Com LLC:

My advice for this person would be to try and put their asset in the right hands of someone who is in this business full time and has the ability to develop what their domain represents. I would either lease the name, or sign a management agreement with this company. I would offer them 70% of all revenues after a certain gross revenue number based on your domain name business model potential and 100% of the first revenues up to a certain number agin based on your domain revenue potential. By working on a Gross number versus net everyone is protected. Like the internet this is a new and better way of doing business.

What I would not do is a PPC site which has no upside. If you can not run a real business around your domain full time or find someone to develop and run it for you, I would sell the asset and hopefully you will make a nice profit by doing so. So many people out there own great names with great potential, but they are simply going nowhere and destroying the name and making the Google Guys much richer by not fully developing what they have.

Rob Grant, WebMediaProperties.com & RealEstateDirectory.com:

All it takes is one good domain.

The rest will follow.

Today, our domain space has become increasingly cluttered with domain litter…useless extensions and obscure country codes that blow around in the wind like trash in a vacant lot… followed by domain investors running wildly around chasing all this garbage.

Don’t chase the litter. Don’t buy the garbage.
Stay focused. Save your money and wait. The moment to grap one good dot com domain has arrived.
You can thank the worst recession in our country’s history for this remarkable opportunity.

I would rather own one good dot com for $100,000. than a large portfolio filled with useless extensions.
Size means nothing in this market. Only quality matters.

When I look back to my early years in this industry – back to 1996 -when the domain stone age was unfolding and just a few dinosaur domainers were roaming around the earth buying domains and bitching about Network Solutions –
Even then, the mantra was always the same.

All it takes is one good domain.

Nothing has changed – even after 13 long years…except the amount of litter that has piled up in the neighborhood.

Joel Ohman, Domain Superstar, LLC:

Treat domain investing just like a regular “offline” business/job and avoid being both dumb and lazy. Many people are attracted to domain investing because they think for some reason that it is easy money that almost anyone can get a hold of – even dumb and lazy people.

The most important thing to remember is that making money online (whether it is domain investing, web development, blogging, etc.) is exactly the same as making money “offline” in that the exact same principles for success apply.

You have to be disciplined, motivated, smart, hard working, and more (or just very lucky in the case of some) to be successful as a domainer. There is no magic elixir that one find out about just by starting an “online” business that guarantees lots of money for lazy dumb people.

It is worth noting that you are usually allowed the luxury of being able to be either lazy or dumb and still be able to be at least marginally successful online because the growth and opportunities are still so great with the various online business models still in relative infancy – you just can’t be both dumb AND lazy and expect to be even remotely successful.

Treat domain investing just like you would treat any other business/job – work extremely hard, learn as much as you can, and if you find yourself just waiting around doing nothing then ask yourself if you are enough of a genius to be able to get away with being lazy while still thinking that you will make a lot of money. Chances are – you’re not 🙂 .

Franky Tong, BowlingLanes.com:

I think the one advice I’d give a new comer would be: don’t fool yourslef into believing there’s easy money in domaining. It’s a lot of hard work, in researching, finding deals, experimenting etc. To a lot of people domainers may seem to have an easy life but it’s only because the hard work was already done years ago. If anyone wants to succeed in this at this stage of the game, be prepared to put in a lot of work and dedication.

Jessica Bookstaff, PigeonForge.com:

1. Focus – Have a plan and a clear goal and stick with it. It is very easy to get sidetracked.

2. Invest in the BEST dotCom you can afford and DEVELOP it with heart. If you can’t develop it with passion then you either need to sell it or start lying to yourself. 😉

3. Ask questions! We are a huge industry of successful entrepreneurs who for the most part are willing to provide information, support and guidance.

Jamie Zoch, Dot Weekly:

A domain name purchase should never be an impulse buy. Just because a domain name looks or sounds cool does not mean it holds value. Every domain purchase should be researched for term popularity, be free of trademarks or potential issues and easily display potential ways to profit from the domain before you even consider buying. Making a great investment often means purchasing something others would consider crazy, so taking some risks often pays off. Quality is much more important then Quantity with domain names!

Michael Castello, Castello Cities Internet Network:

Start your development on something you like and can get your arms around. Nothing to big. Spent one hour every day putting unique content into site and have patience.

George Kirikos, Leap of Faith Financial Services:

My only piece of advice to others would be to read classic literature. Everything one needs to learn about life, including business and investing, can be found by thinking deeply about ideas and words written hundreds or even thousands of years ago.

For example, Act 1, Scene 3 of Hamlet contains a famous speech by Polonius giving advice to his son which certainly is eternal wisdom: http://shakespeare.mit.edu/hamlet/hamlet.1.3.html

And these few precepts in thy memory
See thou character. Give thy thoughts no tongue,
Nor any unproportioned thought his act.
Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar.
Those friends thou hast, and their adoption tried,
Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel;
But do not dull thy palm with entertainment
Of each new-hatch’d, unfledged comrade. Beware
Of entrance to a quarrel, but being in,
Bear’t that the opposed may beware of thee.
Give every man thy ear, but few thy voice;
Take each man’s censure, but reserve thy judgment.
Costly thy habit as thy purse can buy,
But not express’d in fancy; rich, not gaudy;
For the apparel oft proclaims the man,
And they in France of the best rank and station
Are of a most select and generous chief in that.
Neither a borrower nor a lender be;
For loan oft loses both itself and friend,
And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry.
This above all: to thine ownself be true,
And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.

Deconstructing and thinking deeply about that speech, one can learn about being careful with leverage, for example. Or that one should be a great listener. One should be true to oneself. And much, much more (one can write books about the meaning and implications of that single speech, not just for business but for one’s life). Great truths are contained throughout Hamlet, throughout Shakespeare’s other plays, and throughout the greatest works of literature.

I certainly cannot improve upon that guidance and the lessons one can discover through ongoing education.

Kevin Leto, Big Ticket Domains:

Kevin’s Words of Wisdom . . . .

1. The key to success on the Internet is innovation.

2. Never ever quit until you accomplish your goals and objectives. Persistence is the key. Every NO takes you one step closer to a YES.

3. Dream big and know anything your mind can conceive you can achieve.

4. Always share the capital risk in new business ventures.   When you get into business markets you haven’t been in before, nor know anything about, be sure to have partners who do.

5. Networking is everything. Your most valuable asset is your rolodex.

6. Never stop learning. Knowledge is the ultimate Power! The more you know the more valuable you are.

7. Save, save, save for rainy days. No matter how successful, wealthy, or brilliant you think you are, shit happens and you can lose it all one day.

8. Take good care of your pennies and they’ll create dollars and take good care of you. Spend your profits prudently and remember the best investment you can make is what got you rich in the first place, YOU!

9. The wealthier you get and look the more people will try to overcharge you for things. Stay lowkey and you’ll save lots of money.

10. The most important skills to master in business are selling and closing.

11. Don’t bank on FOREVER! This is the biggest mistake entrepreneurs make. Nothing is forever! We live in a dynamic world where tomorrow a single new technology can destroy your business.   Ask any tech CEO what their biggest fear is and they’ll all tell you the same thing, waking up and turning on the news and seeing a new innovative product or service just came out that revolutionizes the entire marketplace.

And realize, domains are not forever either. One day in the future the Internet will be totally changed from what it is and how it works today and domains will no longer be in the equation of things.   We’re safe for now and in the near future, but not forever.

12. Never think the biggest players in domaining are any smarter than you. Most were just in the right place at the right time, saw the opportunities ahead and made the right acquisition decisions. Nothing more, nothing less.

13. Either go with the strategy of building lots of small sites or focus on a few big site projects. Either way can work, but do go beyond just buying and selling domains and get into building and creating. It’s way more challenging, with greater rewards, and much more exciting each day!

14. Always give back to your community some of your time and wealth and help others less fortunate than you to succeed and prosper too.

Tommy Butler, Glasgow.com:

Plan what you are aiming to do   focus on that domain or domains that can make it for you.

Go with your guts and if you have the buzz with the name then you know its right.   Look at the development potential of the name as thats where it is at the moment forget parking its dead.

Use Pool and Snapnames for those $ 60.00 drops you would be surprised what you can pick up and flip for 10 to 20 times   the cost.

picked up many $60.00 drops then sold them for $12.000 to $18.000 one mans junk is another mans goldmine.

Donna Mahony, Domain Boardroom:

If I could only give one piece of advice, it would be to build relationships. Grow your own network.

Take the time to read the boards and blogs and see who is well respected and always helpful. Grab on to their coattails and follow their example.

Stay clear of the those who need to always be confrontational.

If somebody needs help, step up to the best of your ability and don’t be afraid to ask for help either. Most of those successful domainers remember when they needed a hand and are quick to extend theirs.

Your reputation will follow you forever in this digital world. Keep it clean!

Shaun Pilfold, Jobs.ca & Kelowna.com:

One Piece of Advice (okay a few)

– Buy the best quality domain(s) that you can afford to. The starting point for me would be .com and then next, ccTLD’s that have fairly wide commercial usage in that country.

– It is not about quantity, but quality.

– Avoid wasting money on domains that are nothing more than lottery tickets and pipe dreams.

– Diversify your domain business.   There is a whole world out there besides PPC, including affiliate programs, lead generation programs and small and larger scale development.

– Spend less time reading and talking about the domain business and more time actually moving your Internet business forward.

The most important advice I can give is;

– Don’t listen to stupid people.

– Get control of the cash register and get everyone else’s hand out of your wallet.

NBA Basketball Player Seeks to Return Hundreds of Domain Names

11

As I reported back in May, NBA basketball player Chris Bosh won a judgment against a cybersquatter with the help of law firm Winston and Strawn. At the time, it was reported that Bosh was able to recover the domain name ChrisBosh.com, and he also won a financial judgment of $120,000 (including legal fees and damages). The report also indicated that the cybersquatter owned hundreds of other domain names of professional athletes.

This afternoon, Winston & Strawn announced that Bosh was awarded nearly 800 of these cybersquatted domain names, and Bosh now offers their return for free to cybersquatting victims.” Athletes who want to claim the rights to their .com domain names may now do so at no cost to them. According to a note to athletes on the downloadable pdf containing the domain names, “If your name is on this list and you would like your name returned for free, contact Hadi   Teherany at Max Deal at (917) 338-7946 or Hadi@MaxDealTechnologies.com.”

Some of the domain names that were awarded include:

  • DannyFortson.com
  • NickCollison.com
  • SteveNash.com
  • RaefLafrentz.com
  • JJRedick.com
  • JamalCrawford.com
  • TrevorAriza.com
  • RodneyStuckey.com
  • CarmeloAnthony.com
  • KendrickPerkins.com

Congratulations to Winston & Strawn for securing the 800 domain names and to Chris Bosh for being willing to return them to the parties that should have the right to own them. Now if he would just forward ChrisBosh.com to his website, Chris-Bosh.com!

MSSB.com is Now Morgan Stanley Smith Barney

Morgan Stanley Smith BarneyBack in June, I discussed how important it would be for Morgan Stanley Smith Barney to buy the MSSB.com domain name, which had been privately owned since at least its current creation date of 2003. The private owner didn’t really have a better buyer than the newly formed financial giant, and the new company really needed the domain name to advance its online presence, since it’s inevitable that people would shorten the firm’s long name to MSSB.

It appears that Morgan Stanley Smith Barney understood this need, and instead of going through the legal route to get MSSB.com, it looks like they bought it (the name was in Moniker’s Escrow Account at the end of September). Despite the fact that the company was formed well after the owner purchased the domain name, many companies still feel that they deserve a name like this and use the court system or UDRP process as a means of bullying. They may have even had a shot because the parking page showed financial PPC links, but we’ll never know.

In any case, as of today, the domain name is in the possession of Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, and the domain name forwards to their long url, morganstanleysmithbarney.com. Kudos to Morgan Stanley Smith Barney for “getting it” by getting the important domain name the company needed.

Advice From the Most Successful Domain Owners of All Time – Part 4

9

This is part four of a series of five with one piece of advice from some of the most successful domain investors, domain developers, domain monetizers, and others involved in the domain industry. I asked them for one piece of advice they would give to a part-time domain investor looking to build his business. I believe there are quite a few people who are part time domain investors, and I also believe just about anyone involved in the industry can apply some of this advice to their own business models.

I really appreciate all of the contributions from the industry leaders who contributed, and I hope the advice contained within is helpful to you now – or will be helpful to the growth of your business in the future. As an FYI, I intentionally did not put these posts in any particular order.

If you haven’t read them yet, I recommend viewing part one, part two, and part three, and part five will be posted tomorrow.

Warren Royal, Bobbleheads.com:

DEVELOPING? PICK THE RIGHT DOMAIN NAME

I developed my first website in 1994 and have developed many since then. I am a big proponent of developing domains, and I think this is the best way to create revenue. If you have a business, or are looking to create one, buying a great domain name is one of the best investments that you can make. But make sure to get the right one, at the right price. The key is to pick the right name. Here’s a checklist that I use when considering investment opportunities for a project:

1) Is it .COM?
Stick with .COM if you can afford it. If you develop a domain in any other extension, your target audience will confuse your site with the .COM version. For example, I developed Trivia.net over 10 years ago, and developed significant unique content for it, but many of my customers will still confuse it with the .COM version, and will mistakenly visit that site instead of mine.

2) Do I have a clear plan?
Have a crystal-clear development plan in mind. If you have to strain to come up with a plan that “kinda/sorta” fits the name, you probably should move on to a better candidate. For example, the domain names Bobbleheads.com and NorthGeorgia.com are perfect matches for the websites they represent – but I have many others that I have really struggled with to come up with the right development plan.

3) Does it pass a reality check?
Ask some friends (who AREN’T in the domain industry) these questions: “What would you expect to see at the website _________.com? What would you be looking for, if you go there? Would you ever go there?” If their responses match your answer to #1, and they would go there, that’s good. If their response is “Gosh, I don’t know – what does __________ mean?”, then you should move on.

4) Does it have type-in traffic?
If the name passes the test in #3, then it is probably a name that people would type-in hoping to find the product or service that you’re planning to provide. If that’s the case, then the traffic numbers should confirm that this is the case, and it also makes it much easier to obtain sales. In the case of Bobbleheads.com, it was getting several hundred type-in visitors each day, even though there was no site present. That made it very easy for me to start getting sales, as I had visitors – and customers – from day one.

5) Can I confirm the value?
Ask some trustworthy friends (who ARE in the domain industry) what they think about the price. They will have less emotional investment in the name, and should help you to determine if the price is in line or not.

6) Can I really afford it?
If you buy the name, and then the development effort doesn’t work out, can you afford to lose half or all of your investment, or keep the domain for many years without selling it? Or, if you build the site, but your sales never materialize, can you afford to continue to operate it? It’s possible that you may be able to resell the domain, but it’s also possible that you can’t. You should only buy domains that you can afford, whether they are a “good deal” or not.

7) Do I have the right resources to develop it?
If you have the right plan, and the perfect name, but don’t have the technical ability or contacts to actually implement the concept, that’s a problem. I have purchased names with a crystal-clear plan in mind, but then found that I don’t have the right technologies, development resources, or time to get the job done. That’s a problem.

If you can answer all these questions affirmatively, then you’re on the right track for success, and you should move ahead. Otherwise, you should probably look for another opportunity.

Shaun Stafford, Domain Graduate: and ComWired

To a part-time domain investor I say this: Read, research, and then read again. Education is important in all things and domaining is no exception. You are not going to register a few domain names and make a killing. You will make a killing through important timing and from investments that are carefully thought out. Don’t go overboard and spend money just because you have it. Spend money because it will make you money. And before you spend your money on domains, spend your time reading about domains.

Stephen Douglas, SuccessClick.com:

Buy an ebook on domain investing to learn the basics. There are about five good ones out there. Domain Graduate is a good start.

Do NOT go on a domain buying spree because you think you found a niche nobody else has discovered. Buy one or two, then ask around for help on the domain forums without revealing your domains.

Don’t buy domains with hyphens or numbers, unless the numbers are common sequentials such as “365”, “123”, “247” “360” and maybe “4”.

Don’t use a registrar that charges you more than $10 per domain for a new registration.

Read ElliotsBlog.com for great tips on getting started. Make sure you address Elliot by his proper title, “El Silver!”

Eric Rice, DomainsForMedia.com

No matter what else you do strive to end up with at least one great domain like we have with www.snowboards.com which you can build a long term, stable business on no matter what happens. In most cases my advice would be a domain that you can run ecommerce on.

Pete Lamson, NameMedia:

Treat all purchase inquiries – no matter how low – seriously and with your complete respect given to the buyer.

I can’t even begin to tell you how many seemingly unqualified $10 offers BuyDomains has converted into solid 4 figure (or higher) domain sales.

Low ball purchase offers generally occur for one of three reasons:

1. The buyer is unfamiliar with the domain industry, especially the aftermarket
a. This often occurs with SMB “end users” who are professionals within their own industry – but not the domain industry
b. If the buyer has the budget to acquire your name, but needs a domain industry overview to justify the purchase, take the time to do so. The 15 minutes you spend educating the buyer will be well worth your time
2. The buyer is low balling the seller in search of a favorable price, and is perhaps doing do anonymously
a. In most cases buyers of this type are willing to negotiate to a higher price point
b. Remain professional – but also firm. Negotiate to a common ground that will allow both of you to “win” the negotiation
3. The buyer’s initial low offer may be all they can afford
a. We’ve all received these. High school kids, rock bands, etc. People with no ability or intention to increase their initial low ball offer. Once you know this to be the case, politely decline their offer and move on (and yes, remain professional and polite even if they flame you with profanity laced emails).

The key is to determine into which of these three groupings your purchase inquiry falls. This usually cannot be done with beginning a dialogue with the prospective buyer. Phone is always the best method as speaking with the buyer allows you to build a relationship and pick up on nuances that are often missed through email.

Remember, your prospective buyer may only have interest in one of the names you have registered, but he/she likely has many other options available to them.

If you do not respond to an inquiry – or respond unprofessionally – you run the risk of missing out on profitable sales from buyers who may be in one the first two groups described above.

Respond to all offers – and watch the $$ roll in.

Dan Pulcrano, Boulevards

Pick a domain and use it to build a brand that offers value.

Alan Macomber, Girls Coats:

Don’t spread yourself thin, pick a niche and stay focused.

Focus on a niche and begin to acquire the generic .com domain names related to the niche. In many cases the names are owned by non-domainers and are available at a reasonable price if you approach the owner as a person. Remember these are names that are owned by non battle hardened domainers where manners and respect go a long way.

You’d be amazed at what you can buy for $250, $500 or $1,000. Learn how to pick up a super generic .com for $250 directly from the original owner and you’ll slowly build your domain empire. Over a period of months you’ll know who owns each and every generic .com in your niche and you’ll be prepared to acquire them if they become available.

Lastly, in a private sale never ever disclose your triumphant purchases. You are going to feel like telling the world you picked up a particular name for $500 and get a bunch of pats on the back from your fellow domainers. Fight the urge, you’re the only one that needs to know lest you want domainer competitors in your niche.

Andrew Allemann, Domain Name Wire:

If I were to give one piece of advice to a part-time domain investor, it would be to invest in what you know and like.

I often times see people start development projects or start registering/buying a particular type of domain name because they think it’s where the money is. But if you don’t understand that particular niche, or aren’t enthusiastic about it on a personal level, you are less likely to succeed.

This is particularly true with development. If you develop a web site on a topic you like, you’ll enjoy yourself and end up making money. If you develop a site because you think there’s a lot of money in the niche, you’ll hate the process and make less money in the end.

Tim Chen, Thought Convergence:

Unless you are very lucky, the real value of your domain transactions will be created when you build out a website and/or sell the domain, not when you buy it. So be very careful and very honest in assessing just how much value you will commit to add. Everybody I know has bought a domain with the intent to develop it, and sold it later on untouched. Or bought one thinking they could ‘strategically sell it to end users’ and then sold it at auction when they failed to lift a finger to do so. Some of those people lost money because they overvalued what they brought to the table.

Richard Douglas, TooManySecrets.com:

1. For beginners, the best bang for the buck today is to buy/register keyword rich cctld’s such as .co.uk, .com.au, .co.nz, etc. Sign up for drop lists, look around, there are plenty of deals out there, you just need to spend the time to look for them.

2. Don’t be lazy.

3. After you get some keyword rich cctld’s in profitable niches, build 100 pages of unique content and launch the site.   Then, add a page of new content each week. I’d use WordPress with a clean permalink structure and no duplicate content problems.

4. Don’t be lazy.

5. Build two back links per day using a well researched keyword matrix. Remember that a link is a link. That means no-follow, blog comments, images, twitter, bookmarking sites and article sites all count as links.

6. Don’t be lazy.

7. After 6 months you’ll have traffic and rank in the cctld search engines with keyword rich domains in profitable niches that have unique content and back links. You’ll have to decide to monetize or sell the domains.

Rick Latona Auctions Posts TRAFFIC Auction List

Earlier today, Mike Berkens posted a teaser list of domain names that Moniker will be selling at the Traffic auction later this month, and the list looked fantastic (although the reserve prices need to be posted before determining whether the deals will be good).

I just received an email from David Clements of Rick Latona Auctions, who provided their list of domain names that will be auctioned with prices, and the names are great, too.

There seems to be a significant number of great domain names that haven’t been up for auction before.

ActingLessons.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
247Live.com 40,000 USD to 50,000 USD
AntiDepressants.net 1,000 USD to 2,000 USD
Acronyms.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
AntiWrinkleLotion.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Avatars.com 200,000 USD to 250,000 USD
AortaSurgery.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Ballwin.com 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
Aunt.net 300 USD to 400 USD
Bananas.com 75,000 USD to 100,000 USD
BackInjuryAttorneys.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Bourbon.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
BeverlyHillsPlasticSurgeons.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
BroadwayShows.com 800,000 USD to 900,000 USD
Bulldoze.com 4,000 USD to 5,000 USD
Bunk.com 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
Bursars.com 500 USD to 750 USD
Buscar.com 500,000 USD to 600,000 USD
BusinessNetbooks.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Canadians.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
Carts.net 300 USD to 400 USD
ChargingStations.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
CashAllowances.com 300 USD to 400 USD
ChildPsychologists.com 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
CestBon.com 3,000 USD to 4,000 USD
Coding.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
Ciders.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Coed.com 40,000 USD to 50,000 USD
Clemson.net 300 USD to 400 USD
CorporateJets.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
CommemorativePlate.com 300 USD to 400 USD
CY.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
CommercialBonds.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Dancing.com 300,000 USD to 400,000 USD
Conditional.com 4,000 USD to 5,000 USD
Database.com 700,000 USD to 800,000 USD
Contracted.net 300 USD to 400 USD
DebtSolutions.com 400,000 USD to 500,000 USD
DearbornHeights.net 300 USD to 400 USD
Diamantes.com 200,000 USD to 250,000 USD
Decorators.us 500 USD to 750 USD
Draw.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
DrumShops.com 1,000 USD to 2,000 USD
DreamHolidays.com 75,000 USD to 100,000 USD
DryMartinis.com 300 USD to 400 USD
GameShow.com 200,000 USD to 250,000 USD
ExecutiveSalesJobs.com 300 USD to 400 USD
GolfClubs.com 2,000,000 USD to 2,500,000 USD
Frustrate.com 300 USD to 400 USD
GuatemalaCity.com 50,000 USD to 75,000 USD
GarageDoorOpener.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
Hell.com 1,000,000 USD to 1,250,000 USD
HairStudios.com 300 USD to 400 USD
HerbalTeas.com 40,000 USD to 50,000 USD
HeavyweightBoxer.com 300 USD to 400 USD
HomeAlarmsSystems.com 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
Herbals.org 4,000 USD to 5,000 USD
Hookahs.com 20,000 USD to 30,000 USD
Interacts.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
Housekeepers.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
Laggard.com 300 USD to 400 USD
iAuction.com 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
LasikSurgeons.net 300 USD to 400 USD
IKC.com 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
LivePersons.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
Illusionist.com 20,000 USD to 30,000 USD
LotteryNumber.com 4,000 USD to 5,000 USD
Inhibitors.com 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
Lunatics.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
Jewellery.net 40,000 USD to 50,000 USD
Meg.net 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
JV.net 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
Mimes.net 750 USD to 1,000 USD
Kasino.com 30,000 USD to 40,000 USD
NeckInjuryAttorneys.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Marketers.com 30,000 USD to 40,000 USD
NewYorkCity.cc 500 USD to 750 USD
MBAJobs.com 50,000 USD to 75,000 USD
ModelShip.com and ModelShips.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
Pears.net 300 USD to 400 USD
Newfoundland.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
PreownedExoticCars.com 300 USD to 400 USD
NHO.com 20,000 USD to 30,000 USD
ProductCycles.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Ontario.info 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
PureBullDogs.com 750 USD to 1,000 USD
Packing.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
QuitGambling.org 300 USD to 400 USD
PainMedicines.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
Reassembled.com 300 USD to 400 USD
PapuaNewGuinea.com 20,000 USD to 30,000 USD
Reverend.net 750 USD to 1,000 USD
PinkDiamond.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
Saddam.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
Referrals.com 150,000 USD to 200,000 USD
SaddamHussein.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Rio.com 300,000 USD to 400,000 USD
ScubaDiver.com 50,000 USD to 75,000 USD
SandyBeaches.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Seals.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
Satisfier.com 300 USD to 400 USD
SeniorCitizen.com/SeniorCitizens.com 200,000 USD to 250,000 USD
Schizophrenic.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
SkyDiver.com 50,000 USD to 75,000 USD
Scrimmage.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
SM.com 300,000 USD to 400,000 USD
SenseOfHumor.com 300 USD to 400 USD
StateFlag.com and StateFlags.com 40,000 USD to 50,000 USD
SportClinic.com 4,000 USD to 5,000 USD
Tacoma.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
Stimulant.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
T-Bills.com 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
StockInvestments.net 300 USD to 400 USD
TechnicalSupport.com 75,000 USD to 100,000 USD
TheBronx.net 4,000 USD to 5,000 USD
TheUnitedKingdom.com 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
Timorleste.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
Transforms.com 10,000 USD to 20,000 USD
Treinta.com 4,000 USD to 5,000 USD
Tweenies.com 20,000 USD to 30,000 USD
Viewers.com 20,000 USD to 30,000 USD
UsedSmartphones.com 300 USD to 400 USD
VoiceOverIP.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
UTN.com 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
WebmasterForum.com 75,000 USD to 100,000 USD
WeddingProverbs.com 300 USD to 400 USD
Whiskey.com 100,000 USD to 150,000 USD
WineClub.us 750 USD to 1,000 USD
Z6.com, Z6.net and Z6.org 5,000 USD to 10,000 USD
WrinkleLotion.com 300 USD to 400 USD

One More Tip to Avoid ‘Digital Dirt’

2

Today on CNN, CareerBuilder.com writer Rachel Zupek posted an article called ‘Digital dirt’ can haunt your job search. Zupek says that many employers search Google right before or after an interview, and the search results can either have a good impact or disastrous one, depending on what they yield.

Zupek offered several tips to controlling what results come up in Google, and although most of them are helpful, I think a big one is missed.

Owning a website on the .com domain name of your full (and/or nickname used on your resume) can be very helpful in propelling the information you want seen to the top of the results. For most people, chances are very good that there isn’t much competition for your exact name in Google or Bing. As a result, if you have a blog – or even a site listing your accomplishments or anything else you’d want a potential employer to see, there’s a good chance that your exact match domain name and website will come up first.

I am sure an employer will see that you own it and control what’s put down, so while it might not be as impactful as a positive review or comment from a third party, it will help move down any bad results from the top ten.

Recent Posts

You Can “Fail” 95% of the Time and Still Crush It

1
It is said that in Major League Baseball, a player can fail 70% of the time at the plate and still make the Hall...

Enable Immediate Payment for Inventory Domain Names

1
When I was operating my directory websites, a business friend of mine gave me some good advice that applies directly to domain name sales....

GoDaddy Auctions Masterclass on December 11

1
Ready to dominate GoDaddy Auctions? Join industry vets @JJStyler & Bart Mozyrko for a live masterclass on advanced bid strategies, auction secrets, and pro...

Atom.com Shares Priority Placement for Searches

1
Atom.com recently announced "one of the biggest updates to search and discovery" on the platform. The platform is making its search results less literal...

GoDaddy DBS Broker Tom McCarthy Explains His Role

0
GoDaddy has two distinct brokerage teams that work exclusively on behalf of buyers or sellers. The Afternic team represents sellers who have listings on...