Forums
New posts
New posts
Search forums
Market
Domains/Websites Wanted
.com Domain Market
gTLD Domain Market
ccTLD Domain Market
Web3 Domain Market
Third-Level Domain Market
Adult Domain Market
What's New
New profile posts
Latest activity
Members
Current visitors
New profile posts
Search profile posts
Account Upgrade
Premium Members Directory
Log in
Register
What's New
calendar
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Enjoy unlimited access to all forum features for FREE! Optional upgrade available for extra perks.
Forums
Other
The Watercooler
Any Possibility To Remove A Sales History Record?
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="angel69" data-source="post: 2216933" data-attributes="member: 97749"><p>It's a common situation to be in, for your quad example you paid a good amount for it, a bit on the high side but worth it, and it's OK to ask for $3K at least. I'm not sure you'll get it but it's not out of line, w/o researching it it's a great acronym and has <em>Tom </em>as the first three letters, right there any <em>Tom N</em> should potentially want it. They saw you paid "just $850" and are using that to pay what they want. Ignore them and move on unless you feel $1,200 is a good selling price. Explain to them it's all about the market value for such a good quad and its many possibilities for so many people, companies, organizations, etc and in most languages. The profit you're making can't be dictated by a buyer based on the price paid for it. If they don't know how to appreciate a domain then they don't deserve to get it lol...</p><p></p><p>I had a situation where a guy was watching a SnapNames auction long ago where I won, two years later he emails me reminding me what I paid for it and that I should only get so much more (<em>he</em> decided that) for it, and that it was a good enough ROI ?! Needless to say I did not sell to him... and some people will argue previous prices paid for a domain are in fact more relevant than some figure straight out of left field Estibot gives noobs.</p><p></p><p>Marketplaces release the info they want, their lawyers bury those rights in ultra-fine print when you buy domains thru them. IMO if you get a domain at BIN or in open auction (inc expired domains sold in public auctions) then they're free to release that info, but I agree it kills potential deals from buyers who'll see sellers as making too much money. But if you get it in an O/C-O I don't think they should release it, it's still technically a marketplace transaction but it's more private. And if you buy it thru domain acquisition then they should not be allowed to release that at all (but domainers are greedy bastards according to many talking heads outside the trade, remember ? lol....and we can't really fight that) <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite11" alt=":rolleyes:" title="Roll Eyes :rolleyes:" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":rolleyes:" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="angel69, post: 2216933, member: 97749"] It's a common situation to be in, for your quad example you paid a good amount for it, a bit on the high side but worth it, and it's OK to ask for $3K at least. I'm not sure you'll get it but it's not out of line, w/o researching it it's a great acronym and has [I]Tom [/I]as the first three letters, right there any [I]Tom N[/I] should potentially want it. They saw you paid "just $850" and are using that to pay what they want. Ignore them and move on unless you feel $1,200 is a good selling price. Explain to them it's all about the market value for such a good quad and its many possibilities for so many people, companies, organizations, etc and in most languages. The profit you're making can't be dictated by a buyer based on the price paid for it. If they don't know how to appreciate a domain then they don't deserve to get it lol... I had a situation where a guy was watching a SnapNames auction long ago where I won, two years later he emails me reminding me what I paid for it and that I should only get so much more ([I]he[/I] decided that) for it, and that it was a good enough ROI ?! Needless to say I did not sell to him... and some people will argue previous prices paid for a domain are in fact more relevant than some figure straight out of left field Estibot gives noobs. Marketplaces release the info they want, their lawyers bury those rights in ultra-fine print when you buy domains thru them. IMO if you get a domain at BIN or in open auction (inc expired domains sold in public auctions) then they're free to release that info, but I agree it kills potential deals from buyers who'll see sellers as making too much money. But if you get it in an O/C-O I don't think they should release it, it's still technically a marketplace transaction but it's more private. And if you buy it thru domain acquisition then they should not be allowed to release that at all (but domainers are greedy bastards according to many talking heads outside the trade, remember ? lol....and we can't really fight that) :rolleyes: [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Forums
Other
The Watercooler
Any Possibility To Remove A Sales History Record?
Top
Bottom