Hope resides in our young people. But Brexit has held them back.
They should be able to live, work and study in Europe, which is exactly what our Youth Experience Scheme will deliver.
This is part of rebuilding a stronger relationship with Europe. That's the Labour choice.
I feel free to disagree, but this is the right time to give David Raya his flowers. 🌹🔥
This guy has never disappointed us. Whenever we need a savior, David Raya is there. Whenever we need a miracle, David Raya delivers it.
Whenever Arsenal are under pressure, David Raya is always one of the reasons why we are still fighting to win these two trophies.
How can a team score in the last moments, and still the savior ends up being the goalkeeper because the foul was on him?
Congratulations and thank you, David Raya, for choosing us and never letting us down. ❤️👏
@usesav Been trying all day to Log into my Sav account. See below error message. I'm in the UK
Application error: a client-side exception has occurred (see the browser console for more information).
Don’t SELL another domain until you read this.
First, you need to decide what you are.
A domain merchant or a domain investor?
I’m not a merchant. I’m an investor.
Inventory is replaceable. What I own is not.
I don’t write for merchants.
I write for investors not merchants
This ties together everything I’ve been saying all year. Get this wrong and nothing else matters.
Domain investors are some of the most charitable businesspeople I’ve ever seen.
Not because they give money away, but because they leave it on the table.
Over and over again.
More money has been donated to buyers through premature selling than has ever been taken off the table through discipline and conviction.
Why?
Because most domain investors skip the most important step:
understanding what they own before trying to sell it.
The first thing many people do after buying a domain is list it for sale.
That isn’t strategy. That’s desperation disguised as uncertainty.
Listing immediately is a signal that you don’t yet understand the asset. It outsources judgment to a marketplace and hopes the crowd will do your thinking for you.
Marketplaces don’t just provide exposure, they provide context.
If your premium domain is sitting next to five million marginal names, you’ve already accepted junkyard optics. You may get traffic, but you pay for it in perception. Even great names start to smell cheap when they’re surrounded by garbage.
Here’s the rule most people miss:
If you list it, you’re evaluating it.
If they come to you, the sky is the limit.
Selling before curiosity is just another form of desperation.
When I started, I said the minimum value of any domain that someone actually wants was $15,000. They laughed.
Then I raised it to $50,000. They dismissed it.
By 1999, I raised it to $100,000, and I’ve never sold a domain for under that since.
Not because I was stubborn.
Because I had a standard.
My premise was simple:
There is no domain name worth less than a store sign.
A physical store sign can be seen from a block or two away and costs $25,000.
A domain name can be seen from anywhere on earth.
Why would it be worth less?
Now add what it costs to furnish a store. Fixtures. Insurance. Employees. Rent. Overhead. Risk. And that’s before the doors even open.
That’s what I compare domains to.
Something real.
Most people compare domains to other domains and then wonder why they sell cheap.
Mixing merchant-grade domains with investor-grade domains is the kiss of death. It destroys value.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth:
Most people don’t sell because it’s the right time.
They sell because they never finished evaluating what they bought.
That’s not strategy.
That’s intellectual laziness, and it’s costly.
Before you sell another domain, study it.
Understand who would need it.
What could be built on it.
What problem it solves.
What kind of business it could anchor.
That work should have been done before you ever bought it.
Only then have you earned the right to think about selling.
Selling without understanding is not liquidity.
It’s surrender.
Merchants sell inventory to move on.
Investors hold assets to let time do the work.
If you treat irreplaceable assets like replaceable inventory, you will price them like inventory and regret it like an investor.
The market doesn’t punish patience.
It punishes people who never understood what they owned.
Decide which one you are, because your results will follow that choice for the rest of your life.
#Domains #DomainNames #Branding #DigitalAssets
Anthony Joshua’s close associate and personal trainer, Abdul Latif was undertaking so many humanitarian projects in Nigeria including classroom blocks, football pitches before his tragic passing 🥹
Don’t buy another domain until you read this.
Most people don’t lose money in domains because they bought bad names.
They lose money because they sell good ones too early…
or because they never understood why they bought them in the first place.
Before you buy another domain, ask yourself 3 questions:
Why does this name need to exist?
Who will need it, not just want it?
And am I prepared to say “NO” for years if I’m right?
If you can’t answer those clearly, you’re not investing.
You’re shopping.
Domains are not lottery tickets.
They’re long-dated options on human behavior, business formation, and language itself.
That means patience isn’t optional.
It’s the entire edge.
The biggest mistake I see isn’t buying the wrong name.
It’s not knowing when not to sell.
Or worse, not having the discipline to wait.
If you’re buying because you’re bored, anxious, or chasing momentum, stop.
If you’re buying because the name fits a future that hasn’t arrived yet, and you’re willing to wait for it, proceed carefully.
Domains don’t reward activity.
They reward conviction.
Read that again.