I would like to know what you think of a pricing scale for Neighborhood domain names.
At the expensive end of the spectrum, you have buckhead.com which sold for 250k and there are a few other prominent examples.
As domain name wire writes,
I am looking into a few of these neighborhood domains and I am curious what factors and stats that are readily available would go into pricing. So far, I have:
1. Population
2. Average income
3. Growth
4. Proximity to tourist destinations
5. Name recognition
5. # of restaurants, hotels and other advertisers
Would anyone care to add in others? I am also looking for historical pricing on these domains.
At the expensive end of the spectrum, you have buckhead.com which sold for 250k and there are a few other prominent examples.
As domain name wire writes,
Iâm writing today from the Atlanta suburb of Buckhead. Buckhead is the worldâs most expensive neighborhood. Well, in domain name terms, that is. The domain name Buckhead.com sold for $250,000 this year. $250,000 seems like what someone would pay for a city name, not a neighborhood.
But geographic domain names continue to ride the rising tide of localization. How many times you have you heard about local search over the past year?
At first this seems counterintuitive. The internet is global. Why would someone want a domain that applies to only a small percentage of the world, not a generic word that people in every city might search for?
I recently purchased the domain of a small Austin suburb for $5,200. A traditional pay-per-click domain buyer would laugh at the price and say itâs too high. After all, the domain only gets about 10 hits per day. But this small suburb of 10,000 people is growing quickly. It should nearly double in population over the next five years. And itâs affluent. There are at least a dozen home builders in the suburb selling their share of nearly a thousand lots. If you were one of those developers, wouldnât you pay $5,000 for just one lead that resulted in a sale?
The price of a city name is probably out of your reach. Thereâs no way I could buy Austin.com. But you can still join the rising tide of geo domains by buying neighborhoods, suburbs, and small cities.
I am looking into a few of these neighborhood domains and I am curious what factors and stats that are readily available would go into pricing. So far, I have:
1. Population
2. Average income
3. Growth
4. Proximity to tourist destinations
5. Name recognition
5. # of restaurants, hotels and other advertisers
Would anyone care to add in others? I am also looking for historical pricing on these domains.