halvarez is name admin
I got an offer for a domain on another forum, and then I posted the price I wanted for it in their chatroom.
Another member who was in the same auction where I originally bought the domain posted the price that I paid for it, so that the potential buyer, who was also in the chatroom,was able to see that price as well.
Thus exposing my potential profit margin.
These types of actions can take away your leverage, when negotiating prices.
I very much agree. There should be some kind of permission asked of the buyer to post sales, at least like you suggest not index it in the SE's.Something very much like this happened to me, I bought a domain at Pool.com, unknowing to me, DNJournal publishes the domain and $2500 selling price on there site, the page gets indexed on google and yahoo, no problem so far. I then get contacted 2 months later by a serious buyer and the negotiating begins, he does a search and finds the DNJ page and what I paid for it, I was asking 10 times what I paid for it, well worth what I was asking. But is was extremely difficult trying to justify the price after only 60 days, Its like Biggedon says, you lose a lot of your selling leverage when the price is disclosed. DNJ runs a valuable service for all of us, I dont mind them posting sales on there web site, but make it so the darn search engines DONT index it!
Something very much like this happened to me, I bought a domain at Pool.com, unknowing to me, DNJournal publishes the domain and $2500 selling price on there site, the page gets indexed on google and yahoo, no problem so far. I then get contacted 2 months later by a serious buyer and the negotiating begins, he does a search and finds the DNJ page and what I paid for it, I was asking 10 times what I paid for it, well worth what I was asking. But is was extremely difficult trying to justify the price after only 60 days, Its like Biggedon says, you lose a lot of your selling leverage when the price is disclosed. DNJ runs a valuable service for all of us, I dont mind them posting sales on there web site, but make it so the darn search engines DONT index it!
you can email both Pool and Snap and request NOT to disclose price at DNJ.. I've done it many many times
you can email both Pool and Snap and request NOT to disclose price at DNJ.. I've done it many many times ;
If no sales are ever reported you can guarantee the prices and quantity of sales will decline.
well I can guarantee to you that everything I bought and didn't list at DNJ or elsewhere I sold for x3 at least
chicken and egg :lol:
Most people don't make the market they follow it. Sales at DNJournal provide good benchmarks. Without flowers.mobi how many of the subsequent $xxxx & $xxxxx .mobi sales would have followed so quickly?
If no sales are ever reported you can guarantee the prices and quantity of sales will decline.
I'm referring to domains that drop, not retail sales. I'm not proposing drops should'nt be reported, just make it so the search engines dont index the pages or domains, what's so hard about that?
Without the oxygen of publicity there would be far fewer sales. Every time there is a well publicised big ticket sale it brings more and more money into the industry and that is good for the industry.I'm referring to domains that drop, not retail sales. I'm not proposing drops should'nt be reported, just make it so the search engines dont index the pages or domains, what's so hard about that?
Why would he want to ban his [probably] most visited pages from the engines?Talk to Ron.
Why would he want to ban his [probably] most visited pages from the engines?
Your not getting what I'm saying at all...Read my posts again.
I'm referring to domains that drop, not retail sales. I'm not proposing drops should'nt be reported, just make it so the search engines dont index the pages or domains, what's so hard about that?
And I still say to ban the engines from the sales pages of Ron's site would be commercial madness as they are mostly likely by far the most visited pages of his site.