Should You Sell Your Domain Name?
These days I do very little selling. I don
As the value of good generic names keeps increasing, there is very little reason to sell your domains names at this stage at the game. Yet, people do. You would do well to learn one thing concerning the domain name market very early: PATIENCE. If you are eager to spend money then there will be sharks salivating and lining up, happy to take it from you. The point is, that you don
However, if you do come to a time and place that you want to sell your domain, you need to keep a few things in mind.
If you are going to make a business out of domains and you are going to open your own company, you need to make enough to pay any taxes that may be incurred. This is a big area of debate and I’m not a tax expert, so consult your tax advisor.
You obviously need to make enough to cover the original purchase price, but you may also need to factor in other expenses such as renewal fees, how much PayPal, escrow fees (sedo or other escrow company) are going to take from you when you make the domain sale.
Can your domain names make more money if you wait a bit longer for a different person who may want this more? Is there a big enough market to where other people would be willing to buy this name so they had an “edge” on the competition? Or are you selling to a “reseller” (a person just as yourself who is buying the name to hold and resell later).
Is it really the “right” time to sell your domain, if you wait will the product/service/etc become more widely known or will the domain bring in more traffic? (E.g. HybridRVs.com).
Do you really even “need” to sell or do you just want to? You may need money for other ventures, but if you don
Is it an offer that you just cannot refuse?
I have had offers on domain names that I could not refuse before, it’s not common but it happens. I had just registered about 20 .us domain names and shortly thereafter a guy got a hold of me and offered $500 off the bat for one of them. Considering that I just registered the domain name, and the mere fact that the .us market has really not picked up, it was probably a good decision to sell. I sold him the domain for $500 total. That sale paid for the purchase of the other 19 .us
In a case like the above, unless what you just registered is a true gem, there is probably no reason to decline the offer. But before you sell make sure a transaction will even be worth your time. If the same guy came to me and said he would have given me $40 for the domain name (and that would be as high as he would go), then there would have been very little reason for me to sell.
Remember, your time is worth money too. However, if you are a “time” person, then these are the types of sales you need to target and you need to target them over and over again until you reach a healthy base with domain name parking revenue. Once you become a “money” person, these types of things are not worth your time at all in the slightest. Remember, you want to become a money person as soon as possible.
So if you decide to keep your domain names or not which is completely up to you. Just be sure to make a well thought out decision.
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Tags: domain monetization, Domain Name Registration, domain parking, how to sell a domain name

Comment by Earhart on 12 January 2008:
I also recently registered my domain name, first and last, after a friend recommended that I do so. I never thought about registering my own name, not realizing that it makes little sense to leave my name on the table for others to grab. Beyond the fact that I’m a journalist who writes for an online pub, and therefore should have rights to my own name, I don’t want someone else out there taking control of my online identity. For less than 10 bucks, I would have been an idiot not to buy! Thanks for this article! It’s right on the money!
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[...] Should You Sell Your Domain Name? : Domain GraduateAbout the Author. Sean Stafford, Director of Product Development for DNZoom Inc., is actively involved in the domainer community and has helped guide the implementation of the new [...]