Are we domainers or web site owners? Are we in the media business or trading commodities? Are we more interested in the value of a domain or the site associated with that domain?
Increasingly as I’ve been participating in the domain blogosphere I end up asking myself these questions. Unlike many domainers we came into this as hard core Internet marketers and site developers (one partner) and content developers (me). I have to admit that it seems stupid to me to buy very marginal domains, park them and then flip them as opposed to development. Yet I have to admit that what got me into this originally a few years ago was selling a domain I’d registered a month earlier for $3000, a 3000% gain. That’s not bad except…that domain, developed as envisioned, would be worth a lot more than that now.
So I think we’re coming full circle and viewing ourselves as an online media network rather than as domain investors. We’ve bought domains based on this model and bought domains just because they would get type-in traffic. In doing an analysis of our portfolios, the obvious priority, given our strengths is to develop the strong domains, those with an obvious long term value as media properties, and sit on the rest. Maybe we’ll hold a garage sale: Anyone interested in GetLaidEveryNight.com? We bought it but it doesn’t interest us much at this point.
We’ve been developing a site at KitchenDesignInsights.com. It’s not a type-in domain but it is a brandable site and the revenue and traffic potential is off the charts. As a domain this might be worth 4-low 5 figures. As a fully functioning media property a year from now with good traffic and sponsors, affiliates, etc., how much will it be worth? Suppose it were throwing off $10k/month, maybe with a major appliance site sponsor like SubZero or GE?
March 12th, 2008 at 8:54 pm
Great post.
Domain name owners should have an “Open mind”.
Variety is the spice in life.
1)Develop some domain names (quality content)
2)Park some domain names
3)Sell some domain names