Adsenses.com up for sale on CAX

24 12 2011





SuisunBlog.com is for sale

11 04 2011

SuisunBlog.com is for sale. This domain has many backlinks. If you want a cool blog name, Suisun Blog is the perfect name. Suisun City is located in Northern California.

You can discuss Suisun City events, jobs, and the Bay Area. SuisunBlog.com is a good two word domain with web life.

If anyone is interested, please make me an offer in the comment section below. While you’re at it, Suisun.biz is also up for sale as well.The two domains together can make you some revenue. Thanks.





15 03 2011





Why would a buyer make a $100,000 offer on VisitBerlin.com?

31 12 2010

Recent sales and offers continue to puzzle me. I don’t understand how a buyer will visit Sedo or any other domain platform, and then make an offer for 30+ times the value of a domain. There is no accurate tools to appraise a domain. However, Estibot and Valuate are reliable when a buyer or seller needs quick access to a price.

There are many posters on other blogs that reject domain age and stats as a criteria to set a domain’s value. Nevertheless, a newly registered domain is not going to find a home for $50,000. CamRoulette.com is a rare case ($152,000 after hand registration). A domain’s age is relevant to its value. Some will argue against a domain’s age as determining appraisal value, but they know it is an important factor to setting the price.

I know that end-users make huge offers. They have no idea how to find a domain’s worth. All I see is end-users paying top dollars to acquire domains that are nowhere near their value. World Wide Media recently turned down an offer on VisitBerlin.com for $100,000. Of course, I’m confident the domain is worth far more than Estibot and Valuate’s $3300 price point. However, I don’t think VisitBerlin.com is worth $100,000.

It’s frustrating to see a company trying to ask $200,000 for a domain, but then end-users turn down domains that are worth 6 figures. These end-users question a domain offered for $200. They turn around and pay several times that amount for a domain worth 10 times less than the purchase price.

End-users will reject domains because they don’t have enough knowledge to determine their market value. On the other hand, they will make insane offers on over priced domains. Posters may not agree with my assessment, but I know that it is well supported.

I don’t believe that any domain in the 2000′s is worth $100,000. CookingGames.com did manage to fetch $355,000. The Vancouver company that purchased the domain has experience with online games. I understand the reason they purchased the domain. Visit “region” are popular .com domains. Is VisitBerlin.com worth $100,000? $200,000? $300,000? The buyer that offered $100,00 must think the domain is worth $100,000. The owner is probably looking to get between $150,000-$225,000.

How do end-users know what prices to offer a domain owner? Without appraisal tools, there is no effective way to set a market price. Many mediocre domains are selling for high amounts. Such domains are not commonly searched keywords. They don’t deserve to be put into a premium class without any unique traffic, backlinks, and sites linking in. If the domain lacks performance stats, then it should at least have popular keywords.

My recommendation is to change all your settings to accept offers. If you set fixed prices, you’re selling yourself short. Read the DN Journal to determine what types of domains are selling. There has to be a way to make a sale above $1,000. I think asking $1000+ for a domain that appraises above that amount is fair.

You have to be direct when making sales. Don’t allow an end-user to place you in a passive position – to accept less money for your domain(s). If elitist domain investors are making a fortune selling their domains, then we also deserve to make those sales too. No disrespect to World Wide Media, but VisitBerlin.com is not worth $100,000. However, VisitNYC.com recently sold on Sedo for $10,000, which I believe is a domain worth 6 figures.

Good luck! Happy New Year! Thanks for reading.





Tyreke Evans is terrible

28 12 2010

The Sacramento Kings are a total disaster. As a collective
bunch, the Kings are not worth the time to watch. Tyreke Evans proved
he’s no leader. Evans had an opportunity to tie the game with a
free throw, but he failed again to win the game. The Kings finally
realized they’re the worst team in the NBA. The Maloofs gave up on
the Monarchs, and now they have to deal with running a bunch of
pathetic losers. Who is to blame for the Kings’ downfall? Evans
established himself as a fluke. I watched Evans lose last holiday
season versus the Lakers. He ran out the clock, but then lost
control of the ball to force OT. The Kings are consistent losers
with no leadership, heart, and pride.





The 49ers are Garbage

26 12 2010

The San Francisco 49ers are a waste. They stink up every stadium, even Candlestic Park. Mike Singeltary’s venture as a coach of the 49ers will soon end.

Every 49ers loss is followed by a mention to look at the film. The 49ers are an embarassing group with no real identity. The only thing they do consistently is lose.

The 49ers are clumsy clowns. Maybe they should go on a circus show. Hopefully, the 49ers can get their act together to perform in the NFL.

The most common excuse that floods the media is the 49ers’ need to find an identity. Are they a running team? A passing team? A defensive team? The 49ers are neither of these.

Whatever it’s worth, the 49ers have hope. I’m tired of hearing the same excuses. Maybe next will be better. At least the Giants won a championship.





Kings lost their 7th straight game

5 12 2010

Kings fans never expected the team to go 4-14 in the first 18 games. Especially after the Kings looked competitive in their 3-1 start, the team went South for the winter. The Kings lost another game to another good team.

One month after the San Francisco Giants won a title, the Kings are going on a losing binge. I never thought the Kings were good enough to make the playoffs. The Western Conference has too many elite teams to which 1-8 seeds are separated by less than 10 games.

The Kings would have to go 46-18 the rest of the season to punch a ticket to the playoffs. But from the looks of their recent play, I don’t think the Kings can go 18-46 the rest of the way. They’re really a bad team with no answers. All I see is blowout losses, and close losses by slim margins.

I don’t like to talk bad about the Kings because they were once a great team. They used to go out and compete against the best. Many believed the Kings should have won a few titles. Things happen. What should’ve been ends up being a distant memory.

We’re long removed from blowout wins and acrobatic bench players stealing the thunder from visiting teams. We will never see another Kings team that goes 15-0 versus the Eastern Conference at home. The only other record the Kings will duplicate is going 1-27 against the Eastern Conference in a single NBA season.

I’m very frustrated with the Kings. They played good defense versus the Hornet, but they lost the game with a poor 71 point effort. There is some hope the Kings will get their act together. From the looks of the recent debacle, the Kings will probably need another losing season to figure out how to play as a team.

Check out my recent article at Ticket NUB. Click here. Thanks for reading.








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