- Joined
- Jan 31, 2005
- Messages
- 3,116
- Reaction score
- 7
I think I will agree with Francois. We all agree on the fact that a generic name of this magnitude will most certainly help boost any business, but at the end, what matters is the marketing and branding. Yes the domain helps a lot, but it's the active marketing that makes a business popular and in extension successful. The type-ins from the term itself is a very small fraction of the actual amount of visitors. We know of many examples of successful online businesses that use fictional terms as domain names, and yet they branded them to an extent where the amount of visitors they receive is multiple times larger than the amount the generic domains get.
examples:
Travel.com 15,549 , Travelocity.com 256,955
Auctions.com 2,616 Ebay.com 2,849,826
Bank.com 1,997 BankOfAmerica.com 553,664 , CitiBank.com 78,345
Laptops.com 850, Acer.com 5,549, Compaq.com 10,494 (and Compaq is not in business for many years since HP bought them)
In a $350M sale, the domain name played little role. The domain itself without a business behind it would be worth maximum $15M IMO, but I'll accept what Cybertonic said, $35M. The rest represents the value of the business.
examples:
Travel.com 15,549 , Travelocity.com 256,955
Auctions.com 2,616 Ebay.com 2,849,826
Bank.com 1,997 BankOfAmerica.com 553,664 , CitiBank.com 78,345
Laptops.com 850, Acer.com 5,549, Compaq.com 10,494 (and Compaq is not in business for many years since HP bought them)
In a $350M sale, the domain name played little role. The domain itself without a business behind it would be worth maximum $15M IMO, but I'll accept what Cybertonic said, $35M. The rest represents the value of the business.