Sales Suggestion for Fabulous & Others

When I am looking to purchase a domain name in the aftermarket, one thing I try to research is whether the domain name was on the market before, and if so, the price listed on other websites. When I want to flip a name for $25,000, there’s nothing worse than a potential buyer telling me he saw it listed for sale for $15,000 on another website – even though it may have been a very old listing.

One piece of advice I have to Fabulous / Dark Blue Sea – as well as other domain investors who may do the same thing – is to NOT list the asking price in the Whois information. When a company like DomainTools archives Whois lookups, it archives this information forever, and I can see what Fabulous or Protopixel (a DBS subsidiary) had it listed for at one point when I am doing my due diligence on previous ownership.

Although many buyers don’t really care about a previous sales price when they want a particular domain name, it can never help in a negotiation (unless of course you got a significantly better price). When selling to other domain investors, this can be used as a negotiation point for a lower sales price.

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

5 COMMENTS

  1. Setting the right price is key too. I once settled on a $300 Craig’s List listing, and then the buyer went over to Sedo to buy the domain for $100. Be sure to have accurate prices on all platforms.

  2. “When I want to flip a name for $25,000, there’s nothing worse than a potential buyer telling me he saw it listed for sale for $15,000 on another website – even though it may have been a very old listing.”

    And why is this bad….? Are you saying that they buyer doesn’t feel the price you are asking is justified because at some time in the past the price was lower?

    Sounds like an opportunity to provide some education, not to be intimidated. Well, first of all, I think it’s going to depend on how much you paid for the domain you want to flip for $25k? Did you pay $15k, $20k, or only $10? That is the first consideration. It’s easy for a buyer to think a domain you paid $15k for and now want $25k is overpriced, but wait, don’t you have some jusitification for your price? Maybe revenue or that it was underpriced when you bought it. If not, maybe turn down the greed and lower your price. But it’s pretty subjective without facts and figures to back up your thinking.

    But if you turn it around, those old, lower prices just demonstrate what a great investment your domain is! If a buyer can’t recognize that, then they will lose out.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Recent Posts

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...

Nissan Going after Nissan.ai

3
Nissan is an automaker that uses NissanUSA.com for its website here in the US. The reason it uses an off-brand domain name is because...

Using AI For Background Image

9
I acquired a domain name last week, and once it transferred to GoDaddy, I set up a custom landing page using Carrd. Instead of...

It’s All About the Time You Put into It

2
A few years ago, my wife jokingly described my daily work lifestyle as leisurely. In some ways, I thought of that as a badge...