No, the industry is going through a phase of reinvention. It about to become more relevant than ever, but yes of course to achieve this there is going to have to be a shake out. Even Rick has got it largely right on this one. Much of the worthless dross is about to be dropped. We have seen how all the new hyped extensions included the much vaunted dot mobi have failed to gain traction one after another. That is ultimately because they are attempting to serve non-existent markets. The squeeze is gradually being applied to the cyber-squatters and TM Typo brigade, and the Search Engines are gradually being cleared of shanty town developments by domainers spamming them with worthless content hosted on worthless domains. The only real opportunities in terms of new registration will be to serve those markets which are under-developed because they don't routinely operate in the English language or Latin character sets. OK, many domainers will struggle with the concept of working with a foreign language, but they all seemed to manage in English, when half of them appear to have barely got a handle on that.
Why not 8 digit numerics? After all eight is much more auspicious number than 5.
How much do people pay for random phone numbers?
Isn't the whole point of domain names about substituting numerical sequences that the human brain struggles to recall with meaningful strings that are easy to remember. Three digit sequences are fine, anything with repetition or patterns stands a chance to six digits and beyond, but ultimately its down to rarity, and random 5 letter strings just aren't rare enough to make it worth paying big bucks for, let alone sinking a whole load of advertising dollars into.
Most mistakes in this game are made because investors don't think the problem through. Anyone that believe that random 5 figure numerics are going to yield a significant return just has not thought it through. But then perhaps that is not the angle with a Pump and Dump operation?
........... No need to elaborate more.
Well all i'm gonna say is that all the domain auctions are still high,there seems to be more domainers with money than sense...........there are a lot of newbie domainers paying crazy money for domains especially in the auctions.
Those who pay decent money are not newbie domainers, they are the ones that know how to spot a deal. Auctions are far cheaper than a year ago. If you are an investor, now it's the time to buy. If you are a "newbie" now it's the time to sell
Unless you can quote who bought each of these domains, how can you talk about "noob domainers" ? They might as well be end-users that have a business plan for that particular domain. Five, even six figures mean little when you're dealing with a start-up with a plan and funding - even if it's a one-man show. The current advise seems to be, buy the best domain your money can afford.
mmmmmm maybe a year ago but not so much now i'm talking crap names you would never name a startup for going for say 1-2k not like some of the above fetching nearer 10k......
Snapnames is not worse than NameJet for a single reason: domains at Snapnames, Pool etc. are drops with a brand new birthday. If you want to buy old domains you can only do that at NameJet or directly via auctions from their owner.
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