great domain, i felt it went for low cost,
20 is a great number, jus saw the site redirects to a blog, dont know $75k domain how its gona be utilized : )
i disagree... 64.COM changed hands for less than 1/3 of that... still numerics are great investment so matt hold on to them
I don't remember the 64.com sale. Do you have a link for that?
Also, I think the rule about numerics ending with "0" being worth more is not true for NN. Here is why. When you say "twenty dot com" that could mean:
twenty.com
or
20.com
But if you say "twenty nine dot com" then you prably mean "29.com".
um ... that really doesn't make much sense?
but anyhow, i think that 20.com most definitely should have been a six figure sale ... too low imo
its a good buy because all they have to do is keep it for a year and sell for double that.
....However it would be nice to see an original website at 20.com and I don't mean another search engine.
less than that.... in my own experience prices for certain numerics have more than tripled in last 6 months
This may be a subtle point but it is important. In language, people assume the simplest possibility for the spelling of any word or phrase. So if I tell you that you should visit "five eight three four dot com" you would probably type in 5834.com since "fiveeightthreefour.com" would be a long and complicated (difficult).
However, if I tell you my site is "ten dot com" maybe you will visit "10.com" or maybe you will type in "ten.com". In this case "ten" is just as simple a "phrase" as "10". So the owner of 10.com is probably loosing a lot of visitors to ten.com and vise versa. ANYTHING which causes you to leak visitors to a different domain DIMINISHES the value of your domain.
My argument is that "twenty dot com" is more ambiguous in this way than "twenty nine dot com", which people *most likely* assume is written 29.com, which is ths simplest possibility for that name.
Don't get me wrong, 20.com is a great domain name. My point is that so far as sales prices go, I don't see any advantage to having 20.com over having 29.com, even though numerics ending in "0" *tend* to be worth more than the others. The advantage of the 10 multiple gets wiped out by the disadvantage of more leakage and ambiguity.