The name wouldn&
#039;t have had any value if you had not developed it. It works for what you are doing, though, so congrats on that. It just doesn&
#039;t have commercial appeal or type-in traffic, so nobody would pay any amount of XX unless they specifically had plans on developing it.
I&
#039;m not saying the name doesn&
#039;t make sense, but I have had thousands of names that have made a lot of sense, and I had to make adjustments over the last few years in my thinking. It is not enough anymore for a name to make a little bit of sense. For a name to be worth anything, you have to imagine being able to get at least low-mid XXX in a lucky end-user sale at some point (if it gets no traffic). This isn&
#039;t that type of name.
I used to have a name called VarietyMotors.com. There were sites at VarietyMotors.net and VarietyMotors.us, and I held this name for years and wasted a lot of time emailing and thinking about it. At the end I couldn&
#039;t even get a few hundred out of it, so I just included it in a sale of some 50-60 names I basically gave away. A name like LibraryIndex.com would likely sit around forever. I have had similar names to VarietyMotors.com that I sold for good money, and I kept VarietyMotors.com for a few years because at least the potential for a good sale was there, and it had commercial appeal even to somebody who didn&
#039;t have the .net or .us. I got tired of looking at it and sent it to a new home.