@Aladey I do the same because on weekends my thoughts become clearer and ideas just appear out of thin air)))) Domains are a hobby for me and I am happy to devote part of my weekends to this.
@aleistermagic@BitcoinPulseX But unfortunately, that's a lie. We're all adults here, right? We understand that posts like these are made purely for hype, without any obligations?
I think @atomHQ should let domain name sellers use its AI to identify relevant domain names in their portfolios to submit to contests.
https://t.co/nYEdBcp5dh
When I grow up, I want to have the same self-esteem as the owners of all these accounts that were created in 2023-24, have 20-30 subscribers, but their profile says "Marketing Guru" or "Premium Domain Broker".
Oh guys🥲
Domain Lesson Tuesday: Don’t price from hope.
One of the easiest domain pricing mistakes is starting with the dream buyer.
“If the perfect company needs this, it’s worth $50k.”
Maybe. But that is not pricing. That is a story.
A better first pass:
- How many buyers could use it?
- Is the phrase clear without explanation?
- Is the extension helping or hurting?
- Are similar names actually selling?
- Would a buyer see this as useful now, not someday?
- Are there trademark or brand-confusion risks that change the downside?
A domain can be good and still be overpriced.
Strong pricing usually comes from buyer fit, comparable demand, and realistic urgency. Not just from imagining the one buyer who would make the sale look obvious.
💡If a name sits near trademark, UDRP, or brand-confusion territory, verify the risk with a qualified professional before pricing or outreach.