Latest Comment

Saturday Musings –...
1. When was the last time you sold a domain? a:...
Saturday Musings –...
Domain owners are becoming more sophisticated beca...
Saturday Musings –...
Michael, For this particular person, where this do...
Saturday Musings –...
Hi Donny, Great to hear from you. You're experienc...
Saturday Musings –...
I completely agree with your points Michael. From...
The Follies of Fraud
Let me explain stealing identity. What many domain...
The Follies of Fraud
I do not understand what you mean by stealing othe...
The Follies of Fraud
Trust me.....I would rather not reject any applica...
The Follies of Fraud
Rejecting 98% of applicants is surely leaving a lo...
The Follies of Fraud
I think that you may be confusing fraudulent accou...
Home Article Archive Domain Analytics Domaining 101 - Part 6 - What should I pay?
Domaining 101 - Part 6 - What should I pay? PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 4
PoorBest 
Tuesday, 27 November 2007 19:00

In the previous articles in this series I've discussed a number of domain characteristics that I look at prior to a purchase. I'm now going to attempt to provide some guidelines for what you may expect to pay for traffic domains. Before I begin I would like to stress that they are guidelines only and that every domain deal needs to be treated on a case by case basis.

americantendollarSince domains are valued in multiples of revenue what you should always look for is a consistent revenue line. Without a consistent line you are unlikely to make a return on your investment. This may seem obvious but many people get caught up in the deal and forget why they are making it.

The more inconsistent the revenue line the great the discount for the buyer so that they can hedge some of the risk. If you are selling your domains then you are essentially selling a trailing revenue stream so the more work that you can do on your domains to ensure that it's consistent the higher the price.

The second risk facing a purchaser is legal. For example, if the domain name is trademark infringing then the potential new owner not only has to factor in the risk that the domain may be taken off them by the trademark owner but they also may get a damages case. All of this reduces the price.

I'm really going to stick my neck out here and state some revenue multiple ranges for different types of domains. For the purposes of this example let's imagine that roysfood.com has a trademark and is a small business in Utah.

Type of domain  Example No. Months 
Direct TM infringing from heavy TM defending company   microsoftword.com  0-3
Direct TM infringing from non-defending company   roysfood.com  6-12
TM typo of heavy defending company  micorsaft.com  3-9
TM typo of non-defending company  rosyfod.com  12-18
Typo of a generic multi-word  domainperking.com  36-48
Typo of a generic single-word  domian.com  48-60
Generic multi-word  domainparking.com  60-72
Generic single-word  domain.com  72+

Now for all of the disclaimers. These revenue multiple estimations are that, estimations and will vary on a domain by domain basis. The domains are ONLY valued by their traffic and not from the brand ability of the domain. So please don't tell me that boat.com is worth a lot more than I'm suggesting.

Remember that if you have a TM domain name that you are taking on considerable risk that is sometimes not just financial but can be classified as a business risk. Be very careful in heading in this direction and DO NOT read the above table as an endorsement of that type of activity.

For .net's discount the above by 30% and for .org extensions by 50%. ccTLD's are really in a category to themselves and their value depends upon the country. For instance co.uk domains are worth a lot more than .za.

I know that I'm sticking my neck out there but I hope that it gives some of you a bit of a guide. I'm sure that I will get a lot of feedback on this article.....which is great! The more of us that contribute the more accurate the figures will become.

Related articles:
Domaining 101 - Part 1 - What's your business model?
Domaining 101 - Part 2 - Buying domains
Domaining 101 - Part 3 - Buying Traffic Domains
Domaining 101 - Part 4 - Buying Traffic Domains
Domaining 101 - Part 5 - Buying domains with CTR, EPC and Parking

Trackback(0)
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy
Last Updated on Friday, 18 January 2008 03:33