godaddy Coupons
Sunday, October 19, 2008, 12:32 AM
COM
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$7.39 +0.20 icann =$7.59 DNF2
$7.69 goxtgi200c / gtl05 / ZINE3 / OYH3
.NET
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$7.50 gdbb776 TDNAM
$7.99 gdp1009q Register, Renew or transfer
$10.58 gdp0902b
.ORG
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$10.89 gdbb776 /gdp0902b
.info
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$7,99 gdbb776 / goxtgi200c
$8.19 gdp0902b
.US
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$8.99 gdbb776 / gdp0902b
.WS
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$9.99 gdp0902b
.TV
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$15.99 gdp0916d
.MOBI
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$9.99 gdp0915a
$20 off $75++ purchase
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CATALOG1
Other codes you may wanna try
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ZINE3
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DOWNFORCE
.CC renew - less $3
$16.99
Coupon Code : downforce
gdbb776 dropped $1 off a .info renewal - $7.19
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( 2.9 / 169 )rss.com domain name set for $750,000 USD sale
Tuesday, October 7, 2008, 07:56 PM
Sedo, the leading marketplace for buying and selling Internet domain names and websites, has been appointed by Torex Retail Holdings (Torex™) to oversee the sale of rss.com.
With the development of the Internet, Really Simple Syndication (RSS) has emerged as the industry standard term which describes the delivery of automated news feeds over the web.
Jason Richards, global vice president, information services, Torex, commented: “Following our review of our digital assets, we’ve concluded that the domain name RSS, while having significant value in the marketplace, is not totally indicative of the Torex product, support and service offerings on a go-forward basis. Rather than maintaining this asset, we feel that it is better suited for a company in the media, publishing or entertainment sector where it should have stronger market appeal. Sedo is the ideal partner for us to announce its availability and oversee its sale.”
Nora Nanayakkara, director of business development at Sedo, commented: “It’s not often a name with such pertinence comes onto the market. As well as being short and memorable, the name has a widespread meaning. It’s a fantastic opportunity for an online media company to acquire it and grow its readership.”
With over 3,810,000,000 page results for “rss” in Google, businesses can use the name as a powerful asset to attract new customers, boost search engine rankings and grow online advertising revenues. Since being parked and monetised through Sedo, the name averages 20,000 unique views a month.
Rss.com is planned to go up for auction on www.greatdomains.com in October with a $750,000 USD reserve. Buyers can submit their interest either by contacting Sedo directly or by visiting www.sedo.co.uk and searching for the Internet domain name.
Top 10 domain names sold by Sedo:
1. Vodka.com ($3m)
2. Chinese.com ($1.1m)
3. Invest.com ($1.015m)
4. Website.com ($750,000)
5. Telecom.com ($700,000)
6. Annuity.com ($600,000)
7.Blue.com ($500,000)
8. Villas.com ($478,000)
9. Gibraltar.com (US$ 360,000)
10. Sport.co.uk ($265,000)
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( 3 / 208 )sell domains to end user (2)
Sunday, October 5, 2008, 11:59 PM
Here's a quick method of finding possible buyers for your domain name,
1. Go to WHOIS.SC and find owners of variations of your domain name. If you own example.com, there's a chance the owners of example123.com, exam-ple.com or example.us might be interested.
2. Go to Google.com and search for the keywords contained in your domain. Make a list of all the paying advertisers that appear in the "Sponsored Links".
3. Go to Overture.com and search for the keywords contained in your domain. Make a list of all the paying advertisers. (Click "View Advertisers' Max Bids")
These three steps will usually produce a decent sized list of potential buyers for your name. From there you can contact the companies and see if there's any interest in aquiring your name.
DO NOT SPAM! Mass mailing all these companies with a single spam email is a bad idea! Any time you do this you should be contacting these companies indivudually by email, snail mail or phone. Figure out how these companies can benefit by owning your domain and approach them with this information. Other threads on NP contain advice about how to go about this.
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( 3 / 218 )sell domains to end user (1)
Sunday, October 5, 2008, 11:54 PM
1) Look for simillar domains and extensions & Conduct searches in SEs for related websites.
2) With this I compile a Email list of potential interest buyers (based on website or WHOIS contacts).
3) Then I set the name on auction (no FSBO).
4) Right after setting up the domain auction I send out a mail to each identified potential buyer, and inform them about the auction.
(1 by 1 and personalized for each buyer)
http://www.namepros.com/domain-name-discussion/68798-how-to-find-potential-end-users.html
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( 3 / 218 )13 metrics to judge a domain name in a self-appraisal.
Monday, February 11, 2008, 08:27 AM
1) Marketability
2) Phone Test
3) Name Length
4) Brand Recognition
5) Development Value
6) Dot Value
7) Site Traffic natural
8) Site Traffic by Search Engines
9) Industry Strength and Positioning
10) Search Engine Popularity
11) Grammatical / Linguistic value
12) Revenue Generating
13) Comparable sales value
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1) Marketability
How many parts make up the name?
A part is classified as a word, a hyphen, or a number.
Example.com has only 1 part, the word 揺xample?
JoeTheFisherman.com has 3 parts, the parts 揓oe? 揟he? and 揊isherman?
Joe-Fisherman.com has 3 parts, the parts 揓oe? 揾yphen? and 揊isherman?
1Fisherman.com has 2 parts, the parts ?? and 揊isherman?
eFisherman.com has 2 parts, the parts 揈? and 揊isherman?
1 part award 100 points
2 parts award 10 points
3 parts award 2 points
4 parts award 1 point
5 parts or more award 0 points
2) Phone Test
Try giving out the Domain Name on the phone. How does the domain name sound on the phone.
Does the domain use a hyphen or a number?
Do I spell out a number inside the name ex: (搊ne??
Does the domain use a miss-spelling at all?
If the answer to these questions is all 搉o?then multiple current score by 5.
If the answer to any of these questions is 搚es?then divide current score by 2.
3) Name Length (doesn抰 include the length of 搘ww.?or ??or the ending extension)
Find the highest rule that applies.
If 1 part and the name is less then or equal to 8 characters, then multiple current score by 6.
If 1 part and the name is less then or equal to 15 characters, then multiple current score by 3.
If 1 part and the name is less then or equal to 19 characters, then multiple current score by 2.
If 2 parts and the name is less then or equal to 10 characters, then multiple current score by 4.
If 2 parts and the name is less then or equal to 16 characters, then multiple current score by 3.
If 2 parts and the name is less then or equal to 19 characters, then multiple current score by 2.
If 3 parts and the name is less then or equal to 12 characters, then multiple current score by 2.
4) Brand Recognition
Do people know what the site does even before they even go there?
Either through the meaning of the name or by advertising.
An example of advertising is everyone knows Microsoft.com or ATT.com.
Normal people will need to use the domain meaning to score on this point.
If name has Brand Recognition then multiple current score by 3.
5) Development Value
How much work as been put into Developing the site?
Just a Splash page then multiple current score by 2.
Something more then a Splash page then multiple current score by 3.
Has the domain ever hosted a website that received more then 1000 visitors a day then multiple current score by 25.
6) Dot Value
If .COM extension multiple current score by 3.
If country extension multiple current score by 2.
If country extension is now generic no bonus (example .CC, .TV, .WS)
7) Site Traffic Natural
10-39 natural type-ins multiple current score by 4.
40-100 natural type-ins multiple current score by 8.
100+ natural type-ins multiple current score by 25.
Natural type-ins means (Unique IPs without referrers)
8) Site Traffic by Search Engines
10-39 Unique IPs multiple current score by 2.
40-500 Unique IPs multiple current score by 3.
500+ Unique IPs multiple current score by 4.
9) Industry Strength and Positioning
Does the domain have a calling? If the domain has a targeted industry how crowded is that industry? Does the domain accurately and generically describe what it was registered to do. Here is an example, For a travel agent, FlyCheap.com is a score 3. For a travel agent TravelCheap.com is a score 7.
Describes generically the industry then multiple current score by 7.
Describes specifically something in the industry then multiple current score by 3.
10) Search Engine Popularity
How do the terms in the domain name rank in Search Engines?
揋reat? then multiple current score by 7.
揋ood? then multiple current score by 2.
揂ll Right? then no bonus.
11) Grammatical / Linguistic value
Does it sounds correct? Does it read like a human normally speaks. For example: ShoppestMall.com, this sounds wierd. But ShoppingMall.com sounds correct. The plural form verses the singular form makes a huge difference.
If the name sounds correct, then multiple current score by 2.
12) Revenue Generating
Multiple yearly income of the domain by 2.5, add this dollar value to your final price.
13) Comparable sales value
What other domains have sold at that price. Is your name the same score?
Market analysis on your domain price is very important. Being able to justify your price against other domains selling price is key. Don抰 do marketing analysis off of list price. Only selling price will work. To find prices of domains that have sold use Afternic or other domain auction sites.
The highest score possible is something huge like 6,615,000,000
Score doesn抰 correlate to actual price very well, You need to use percentiles to figure out what the price is.
Total score:
Lowest = $15 (40 percentile)
Low score = $25-$40 (30 percentile)
Mid score = $100-$300 (25 percentile)
High score = $500-$1000 (3 percentile)
Extreme score = $1000+ (2 percentile)
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