Estibot Free Appraisal

Over at www.EstiBot.com , they have just come out with a new tool. If your not familiar with EstiBot, it is an “Instant Domain Name Appraisal Tool”. Although the appraisals it gives aren’t always 100% accurate, it give you great information about the domain name, and more.

The new TDNAM tool is pretty nice. You can type in a keyword, and it will automatically display domain names that are for sale with that keyword. It also shows the following:

  • Time Left In The Auction/ Sale
  • Traffic
  • Bids
  • Price
  • EstiBot Appraisal
  • Keywords
  • Overture
  • Wordtracker
  • Alexa Rank
  • Backlinks
  • PageRank
  • Google Results
  • # of Advertisers Using The Keywords
  • Maximum CPC The Advertisers are paying
  • Availability Of The Domain In .com . net .org .info .us .tv

This tool is still in “Early Alpha” stage, so you might come across a few bugs, but I have found that it is working great!

You can check it out here: http://estibotpro.com/auctions/

-Jake

Teendomainer.com

Rick Latona – Domainer Of The Year >take a look

Tacliq got this from Dnkithcen.com visit the web for more information.

Here it is…. ( MUST READ!!)

After my interview with Rick Schwartz someone asked me to interview Rick Latona. Well, I have come through again. I have been asking Rick for months to do an interview, I must have caught him on a good day last week because he finally agreed.

Besides being the 2008 Domainer Of The Year, Rick is the LARGEST domain broker in the world and most recently has been added to the TRAFFIC auction events. In his first TRAFFIC auction which was held in Brooklyn NY only two months ago Rick’s auction brought in roughly $700,000. We will find out very soon if he can top that, next TRAFFIC event is in two weeks which will be hosted in Australia.

OK, lets see what Rick has to say about some of my questions.

Q. What is your educational background?
A. I dropped out of high school when I was 16 years old. I do not regret my decision but at the same time do not endorse someone else dropping out of school. In my circumstance, I’ve read thousands of books since. I’ve made up and then some for any lack of education except for areas like math and science which are entirely too boring to study on your own.

Q. When did you start domaining and why?
A.
I’ve been “into” domains since 1995 but didn’t trust my instincts and didn’t act aggressively about them. During these years I acquired many premium names which I later sold like Dollars.com and Spanish.com but I could have had thousands of them. A story I’ve told before is that my sister told me it would be unethical to register domains if I didn’t need them so I didn’t. It took me ten years to stop resenting her for that and take responsibility in my own decisions.

Q. What did you do before domaining?
A.
With the above question answered, I believe my domaining career started in 2004. It was during this year that I started DigiPawn.com and really following the aftermarket. During the late 90s and the early part of this decade I spent time in the hosting business where I held founders shares and helped take Interland, Inc public, now Web.com (NASDAQ WWWW). I’ve also owned and operated a myriad of websites. Some I’m proud of and some I’m not so proud of.

Q. How many domain names do you own? Want to share any of them?
A.
Currently I have around 40,000 names. I’m always reluctant to answer this question because I buy and sell names so frequently. Anyone can get a snap shot of names I own by subscribing to my newsletter at RickLatona.com.

Q. I asked Rick Schwartz this question, have to ask you. What do you drive? I know you have that classic Lincoln that was on your site before, what else do you have?
A.
I have a 1965 Convertible Lincoln Continental, a 1958 Corvette C1 (convertible of course), a 2005 Bentley Continental GT and a 2006 Range Rover SC.

Q. What is an average day for you?
A.
I often tell people I answer emails for a living. Somehow, answering emails for 10 hours a day I direct a dozen companies and get everything done.

Q. I see on your blog different travel spots, where is your favorite place to travel?
A.
I like adventure travel like climbing mountains, snowboarding, surfing and the like. You wouldn’t notice it by looking at me because I’m not a model for physical fitness but where there is a will there is a way!

Q. Do you spend any time in the domainer forums?
A.
I stop by all of the major forums to search for my name and my company names from time to time to make sure I don’t need to defend myself. Other than that, I stay away. I think blogs and forums stunt your ability for original thought. I don’t want to find myself registering random LLLLs because I read a 20 page thread that everyone else is doing it.

Q. Imagine starting out as a domainer today, what type(s) of domains would you register?
A.
I hand registered 4000 names in the last 30 days. I am finding new ways to make money on HR names all of the time. You’ll find out what I’m registering now, years from now when I’m trying to sell them. I can give you a clue though, they are all .com names or ccTLD names. I never touch mobi, info, biz or alternative gTLD names. ccTLD names have a lot of growth potential.

Q. Do you use any tools to register your domain names or search for new ones?
A.
I have my own custom built tools that I use. I can’t go into details.

Q. What are your thoughts on short domain names, 5 characters or less?
A.
For the most part, they don’t justify their value. Right now I’m selling cr.com which makes sense because it gets a lot of ccTLD typo traffic. That’s a big part of why LLs make sense. The idea that any LLL.com is worth at least $4,000 is ludicrous to me. Just because someone might have those letters as an acronym doesn’t mean you are going to make a killing on that name. LLLLs make even less sense. Again, this question is a product of board manipulation. I suggest you and your readers come up with your own independent ideas and to do that you might need to close your laptop and take a 2 hour walk around the neighborhood.

Q. How would you recommend an average domainer sell their domain names?
A.
They should start by buying names that are sellable. You wouldn’t believe the amount of crap that I have to look at every day. My father used to tell me that when he bought raw land to flip he wanted to make sure there was timber or something on the land that could pay for the mortgage payments if he wasn’t able to flip the deal. Think about that. Don’t buy a name you aren’t willing to own if you aren’t able to sell it.

Q. On your site you say you are the largest domain broker in the world. How did you build your client list?
A.
It pays to advertise. I’ve made some big moves. I have two page ads in Website Magazine and Internet Retailer. I’ve also sponsored message boards and more. I’m getting about 100 new subscribers a day to my newsletter at this time.

Q. How do you put a price tag on your domain names?
A.
Years of experience. I buy and sell so many names I don’t think anyone could appraise a name better than I could.

Q. What is the most profit you made on a single domain name?
A.
I’ve done a bit of deals that made in the high xxx,xxx range. I’ve yet to crack 7 figures on a single deal but I’m not greedy. I believe that pigs get fat and hogs get slaughtered.

Q. How much do you make every year, six figures, seven figures?
A.
Use your imagination.

Q. How does it feel to be named 2008 Domainer of the year?
A.
It feels great! I don’t think there is any bigger honor than your peers selecting you as the best for a one year period. I’m incredibly proud of that award.

Q. How is aeiou.com coming along? The company is somewhat new to my understanding but creating a very nice buzz. Are your clients making a good return on their investment with you?
A.
I’d like to think they are happy. If your name has the right keywords in it we can make your name make more money. I’m my biggest client. I spend a lot of money every month putting mini-sites up on my names.

Q. Is there anything else you want to share or words of advice?
A.
That’s about it. I’m off to Cairo this weekend to attend the ICANN event then to Australia for my next auction which is on the 20th. I’m always announcing new projects. The best way to stay informed is to keep an eye on RickLatona.com.

yup have read this all? what do you think?

after reading this all just make me think if Rick Latona could get $ x.xxx.xxx ( he was a drop out ) how much he will get if he graduate the collage? ( $ xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx )

How to Sell a Domain Name

This article if from lord Brar ..so make sure to sneak at his link below.

Author: Lord Brar

6 Feb

Please Note – This Post is Work in Progress and We Will Keep Adding More Tips and Ideas. Click Here to Get Regular Updates.

One of the joys of being a moderator at one of the most popular domaining forum — DNForum — is that you get swamped with private messages from people. One of the question which I get asked the most is How to Sell a Domain Name.

In this post I am going to talk about the strategies I use to sell a domain name or website. Let’s get started, shall we?

Two Important Things

There are a few things that I must tell you before we get started.

1. DO NOT buy any eBook — I have read most of the eBooks currently available in the market and they are mostly useless and provide obsolete information.

2. Subscribe to DomainingTips.com Newsletter — As the moderator of one of the biggest and most influential domaining forum (DNForum), I have access to some of the biggest players in the industry.

Subscription to the newsletter is absolutely free and you also get a free copy of my guide “8 Things You Must Know About Making Money From Domain Name”. Click here to subscribe. You will be glad that you did.

Selling a Domain Name – Know Your Market!

There are two kind of people who buy domain names — 1. Resellers and 2. End Users.

Resellers are the people who buy domains and sites with the sole purpose of reselling them. They are not interested in keeping their inventory forever and are, usually, not interested in developing the domain name.

End Users are the people who are interested in developing and running the domain. Unlike resellers, they plan to use the domain for development or promotion purposes and don’t plan to sell it as soon as they find a buyer. An end user can be an individual or a company.

Selling a Domain Name – What Actually Sells

A lot of times people will list a domain for sale and get discouraged when no one makes an offer or buys what they are selling. Most of the times it turns out that they were trying to sell to wrong people.

Let’s see what actually sells and who buys it.

1. Generic Domains. These are domains like hotels.com, cars.com, search.com, poker.com, loan.com, coupons.com etc.

The reason why these domains are valuable is because a lot of people will never use a search engine to find things but instead just type [keyword].com — which translates into highly targeted traffic.

End-Users pay big bucks for these type of names. Resellers are also willing to offer big bucks for them in hope of selling them for even bigger bucks.

2. Revenue Domains. These are the names which make revenue from parking traffic. If you have this kind of domain then resellers would totally jump at it and offer you 12-15 months of revenue for it.

3. Brandable Domains. These are the brandable names like NewYorkHotels.com or MiamiRealtors.com. The target for these types of domains is usually end users. Resellers don’t shell much money for them usually.

4. Developed Sites - There is yet another category which is domains with websites. They are much easier to sell as they usually have traffic and revenue attached to them by the virtue of their search engine rankings.

Resellers buy sites which don’t take much effort to run or promote. End users look for sites with long-term potential — which may even mean putting effort into running the site or promoting it.

Selling a Domain Name – Top 5 Ways to Sell Domains

Now you know the kind of domains which sell and who buys them, however, the bigger question is where to sell them. Let’s talk about various ways –

1. Domain Forums. Domain forums are the most popular way to sell domains. Places like DNForum (one of the biggest and most influential), SitePoint, WickedFire and NamePros (mostly newbies hangout here) are popular to sell domains. However, the people who hangout on these sites are mostly resellers and only a small proportion are end-users.

2. Online Auctions. There are lot of online auction sites like sedo.com where you can sell domains and you can even auction domains on forums like DNForum.com.

eBay also has a domain auction section, however, it is usually the newbies which make up the bulk of audience there and it is turnkey sites and cheap domains which sell best there. There have been a lot of reports of scams on eBay — therefore, I don’t recommend selling on eBay.

3. Domain Brokers. These are the people and companies who take a percentage cut — usually 15-20% of the final value — for selling your domain.

If you have a good domain which you hope to sell for bigger bucks and are ready to pay to brokerage, it is usually a good idea to involve brokers. They usually have lot of contacts and experience in selling domains. Think of them like real-estate agents except they focus on virtual real-estate.

4. Live Auctions. This is a newer trend where companies like Moniker.com are conducting live auctions for domains at various industry events. This is where a lot of end users and big guys hang out and where the big-buck deals take place.

Obviously, these companies are choosy about the domains that they include in the auction. However, you should never hesitate to submit your names for auction — you never know it may sell. Newsletter Subscribers will get regular updates about upcoming auctions and submission deadlines.

5. Everyone You Know. Tell everyone you already know — including your old customers and your friends — that you have a domain for sale. There is a chance that they themselves or someone they know may be interested in your domain. I have sold a whole lot of domains this way.

This was something which I never used to tell earlier, however, when I told it to some of my friends who had the same clients as me, I found that it didn’t make much of difference to my success rate. I found that success rate with this tactic depended on lot of factors which I regularly talk in the newsletter.

Selling a Domain Name – Final Word

I hope you found this guide useful. If you have any comments or suggestions, feel free to contact me by email (lord [at] lordbrar.com), AIM (lordbrar) or MSN (lord [at] lordbrar.com). You can also check some more tips on How to Sell a Domain Name.

6 Ways Not to Go Broke Developing Domains — Lessons That I Have Learnt the Hard Way.

Author: Lord Brar

11 Apr

Make Money From Domains

Ever since I made my Domaining Strategy post, I have been getting a lot of comments and questions from you all. First of all, thanks a lot for your comments and messages — that is exactly what keeps me motivated to write here.

Most of the questions which you have asked will be covered in upcoming posts about traffic, revenue, outsourcing, hosting etc. In this post, I am going to answer two important questions -

1. How to minimize your development costs?
2. How to Scale-Up this strategy?

This post will be one of the most important — if not the most — posts in the series as it describes the mindset you need to succeed in the game. These points are essentially derived from my own experience developing domains over the last 9 years — so yes, they are street-tested.

Let’s get started, shall we?

Tip #1 – Know Your Niches

This is perhaps the most important tip I can ever give you — Focus on niches you already have an interest in. This will make your life a lot easier, fun and profitable. To quote Diorex from WickedFire -

I dont think that unmarried college age guys are going to be rockstars at promoting a menopause product or even a baby shower list. Look to your life experiences for things you naturally know a little bit about. Sure you can learn, but why set yourself up for a longer more difficult road.

.

I’d also quote Hugh MacLeod from his HughTrain Post

Hugh Train

Even though the niche you are interested in may not be as profitable as pay-day loans or credit-cards but it would be easier for you to know what people really want and dominate your niche. This would translate into much higher overall profits and you’d have fun doing what you love.

PS: I have some finance domains lying around which I just can’t get myself to research into and develop! If you have an interest in grabbing them cheap, give me a holler.

Tip #2 – Think Small. Seriously.

It is particularly important to remember that you cannot satisfy everyone at the same time. If you try to do that, you end up disappointing everyone.

So, don’t try to build general-purpose and “one size fits all” kind of sites. TO make such sites truly spectacular you’d need a lot of resources — which should not be your objective.

Let’s say that fitness is one of niches I operate in. To build a general fitness site covering topics for both men and women would be absolutely crazy on my part. If I focus on Men’s Health, that would be better and easier for me but it would be very broad subject and still require a LOT of resources to create good site in.

What I would do is that I’d split the niche into further niches — building abs, reducing fat, dieting, bulking up, upper-body exercises, stronger legs, sports training, cardio-exercises, aerobics etc. — and build separate sites for them. This would make it easier for me to build the site quickly, promote my sites more easily and get more targeted traffic.

Now, I am not saying that you cannot build sites on broader topics — I do it all the time. But, be prepared to put more resources and energy into them. I have a lot of broad-niche sites but I have even more sharp-niche sites.

Tip #3 – Use “Out-Of-Box” Solutions

Don’t re-invent the wheel. If there is some “out-of-box solution” available for what you want to do, use that — even if it means some lost functionality, you will be saving tons and tons of money and/or time that you would have to spend on programming and design.

Most of the times you will be able to find a free open-source solution, all you need to do is look hard enough.

For content management use WordPress or Joomla and use free or cheap templates to change the look. For forums you can use vBulletin or PhpBB. Photopost PHP or Coppermine get the job done for a photo gallery. vBulletin will also take care of your Social-Networking needs.

Use a site like HotScripts.com to find out the various available scripts. You could download and install the script on your server — most of the times Read-Me files are detailed enough.

If you are not comfortable doing it yourself, hire a freelancer — but read Tip #5 before you do. Also, don’t use any third party hosted services except widgets and analytics.

Basically, the whole objective here is to use the already existing free or cheap tools to build your website.

Tip #4 – Re-Invest into Your Domains.

Start milking revenue from your domains right away by using affiliate links, CPA links, Google AdSense et. al. Contrary to the popular belief, sites CAN make money from low but quality traffic.

To give example of one of my own sites, it got only 8 visitors from search engine and made $147 in affiliate commission.

So, optimize your site for revenue right from the start — even though you may get only small amount to traffic initially, but you don’t want to waste it.

Now, whatever money your site makes, re-invest at least 75% back into the domain. Promote the site, get professional content written, buy new software or get custom scripting done — but, reinvest the money to grow your site.

Remember – your site’s revenue is not your pay day but rather your pay day will be when your 25% becomes substantial or if you ever sell the site.

Tip #5 – Freelancers Will Screw You

Or at least 80% of them will produce crappy stuff or miss deadlines and you will lose money with them. But it not all gloom — you have to know and follow certain rules of thumb which I will be discussing in later posts. I will embed a link to the post here whenever I publish it.

Also, if you are subscribed to the newsletter, you will get a buzz as soon as I publish the post. So, if you are not already subscribed to the newsletter, it is a good time to subscribe now.

Tip #6 – Keep Close Financial Records

The idea is to keep a detailed record of how much you have invested in a domain and what sort of returns it is getting. I have found that keeping records will not only keep you updated of your current reality but will also keep you motivated to work harder.

With my own sites, I keep an excel file with weekly details of how much traffic did the site get and how much money did it make from various revenue channels. If both don’t increase consistently, I know I need to get moving to grow these figures.

Also, do it on a weekend and don’t spend too much time on keeping super-detailed stats tracking every figure under the sun — just a bird’s eye view of where your sites are going in terms of revenue and traffic. Your priority should be creating and promoting your sites.

Closing Thoughts

Now remember — these are just the rules-of-thumb and the list is no way exhaustive. Also, every situation is unique and you will learn the most by diving in and doing. So, start working, start making mistakes and start learning!

Stay tuned for other posts on the subject including – Stockdale Paradox, The “Big Fat Lie” Media Wants You to Believe, Building Websites, Choosing the Right Host, Traffic Secrets, Art of Recurring Profits and Revenue Maximization.

Domains web for all around web

www.domaining.com
www.dnkitchen.com
thelazydomainer.com
www.namepros.com
www.dnforum.com

and many more.
just try to visit them and study as much as you can for your future..

study…study…study…stud..

How to Choose a Host Without Getting Ripped-Off — 6 Practical “Rules of Thumb” to Remember.

Author: Lord Brar

Web Hosting

One of the most critical components component of your success on the internet is your web-host. If your web-host keeps giving you troubles, you will not be able to concentrate on developing, promoting and monetizing your websites. Also, if your website is down, you will not be able to show any ads and that would translate into zero revenue for you.

Sure — you can go with the top-of-shelf hosts which provide 100% uptime but they cost an arm and leg. Since our objective is to keep our costs minimum, we are going to use cheap shared-hosts. However, a LOT of these cheap hosts often resort of tactics — which I call “Dirty Games” — to squeeze every bit of profit from their customers.

Read this post to find out how most of these hosts try to rip-off their customers and “Rules of Thumb’ for identifying and avoiding such hosts. And yes, I will have host recommendations from my personal experience with some companies. Let’s get down to business, shall we?

The Dirty Games

With the advent of cut-throat competition in the hosting market, a lot of hosts have taken to making false and misleading statements to lure those new to the industry and then use “dirty-tacts” to squeeze every bit of profit out of them. Here are Five Worst Dirty-Tactics.

#1 – Long Lock-In Periods – See those ultra-cheap $3 or $4 a month prices? Most of the times they are valid only if you prepay for a year or two. What this means is that you are going to be stuck with this host for next year or two.

Yes, what this means is that it doesn’t matter how bad the quality of service after the 30 days trial period, you are neither getting a refund nor you have an exit strategy. And let me tell you from my own personal experience, even the poster-boys of the industry go bad.

A few years ago I used to have a website hosted with Site5. At that time they used to be a rock-solid host and everyone used to swear by their quality of service. And then within a few months the quality of service turned into one of the worst in the industry.

Perhaps they were victims of their own success and grew much faster than they could manage. They are still in business but I don’t hear much about them these days. However, the point is not that. The point is that people who had prepaid them for two years had to stick with them and suffer through the bad quality of service.

Some hosts use tactics like introducing setup fees to motivate people to pay for longer period. If a host has a setup fee — avoid them. Back in 1998-99, setting up an account used to be a manual thing. However, today, when most of the stuff is automated, charging a setup fees is just a scheme to get you to pay for a longer contract.

#2 – Unreasonable Restrictions – A lot of these hosts put unreasonable restrictions on their users. These may include a restriction on number of domains, daily bandwidth limit, maximum file size limit, database size limit, not being able to use certain popular scripts etc.

One very popular host doesn’t allow its customers to use FTP Software but rather forces them to use an online interface — what a pain in ass if you have to upload hundreds of files — like when you are installing wordpress.

The very same host also has a file size limit of a few kb and a database size of just 10 MB — even though they are giving their customers hundreds of GBs of diskspace and thousands of GBs of bandwidth. Try filling up those spaces in a few lifetimes if you can.

Another host claims to give 3000 GB of bandwidth a month — however they have a daily cap of 10 GB. This means that no matter what, you cannot use more than 300 GB a month of bandwidth.

And there are so many other hosts which do these type of things.

Now mind you, we want to host all of our domains on just one account — using addon domains facility which I will explain it at later in post. If you end up with a host with such crazy restrictions, you are basically in big trouble.

#3 – Super-Sneaky Contracts – Let’s not even get started on the fine-print they have in their contacts. Basically what it usually says is that if you site starts to get popular, we will kick you out unless you upgrade to our more-expensive plan.

Want to know another super-sneaky clause most of these cheapo hosts have? Even though you are given a 30 day money-back period, but, if you ask for the money back, you have to pay setup costs which are usually about $30. Pretty high considering annual fees of most of these hosts is like 80 or 90 bucks!

#4 – Low Quality Infrastructure. One of the reasons why these hosts are able to offer services at such low prices and still be in business is because they do ruthless cost-cutting.

Usually this cost cutting involves using low-quality server infrastructure and using low-quality networks. This usually translates in low-reliability and quality of services being delivered.

Another department which suffers is customer-service. Since highly skilled technical staff costs money, so they are out of question. These hosts usually outsource their support to third-world countries and hire bare-minimum skilled staff. Result – lower quality of support for their customers.

#5 – Hidden Costs – What most people don’t realize when they are paying for the super-cheap hosting package is even though that they are getting a package with “more than you can ever use” bandwidth and space, the power-features missing.

God forbid, if your site ever becomes famous — which it will if you keep following my strategies — you are in for a shock!

I have seen some hosts charging $15 per GB of bandwidth over usage (yeah right!), $10 a month for SSL Certificate (needed for eCommerce) and $8 a month for ever add-on domain.

Now you have to remember that for these hosts, it is simply a numbers game. If you get dissatisfied and move on, it would hardly make a dent to their figure of hundreds of thousands of customers.

However, for you, it will mean a lot of wasted time, effort and money. Let’s see how to find the right host.

The “Rules of Thumb”

Am I saying that all cheap hosts are bad and should be avoided? Absolutely Not. I have used them for a long time before moving to VPSes. However, I do have a big problem with those super-cheap hosts who will go any extent to lure new customers and keep them locked in — by hook or my crook.

Here are some things you should remember when choosing a web-host. They will save you a lot of hassles and headaches in long run.

Rule#1 – No Lock-In. I would strongly recommend against paying anything more than a month in advance and, if you have to, a maximum of three months.

Sure, you may pay a bit higher price by paying monthly than you’d if you pay yearly. However, think of it as your “host-reliability” insurance — in case their services start to deteriorate, you will have an option of moving to another host.

Rule #2 – Know the Restrictions. It is an excellent idea to clear-up any special restrictions that the web host may have before you sign-up with them. Nasty surprises are particularly bad if they affect you monetarily.

And when you ask them about this, be specific in your questions. Ask them the database size limit, file-size limit, if they have any cap-on daily bandwidth usage and any particular script they disallow.

Do remember that nearly every host disallows extremely server intensive scripts like chat-scripts on shared infrastructure. You should be concerned only if they disallow popular scripts like vBulletin, PhotoPost and other which you may use.

Rule #3 – Know Thy Contract. Read the terms of service and acceptable use policy carefully before you sign-up with the webhost. Don’t just skim through it considering it to be regular stuff — more than often it is not and it directly affects you.

Rule #4 – Clarify Prices. Make sure that you always clarify the pricing of various add-ons before you hit the sign-up button. Here also you have to be specific unless you love getting vague responses.

Ask them if they will charge a setup fee if you terminate within first 15 days, cost of excess bandwidth and space, cost of upgrading an account and if there are any additional administration and support charges you should be aware of.

Rule #5 – Contact Support. Always contact the webhost’s support department via eMail and, if they provide it, by phone. Try to assess how professional and supportive they are when you ask questions I recommend above.

Rule #6 – Take my Recommendation. I have recommended a host below who I had happily used for over two-years! I am sure you will be glad that you took my suggestion.

The Host I Recommend

I Recommend HostGator – Click this link and then use the coupon Jury to get the first month for just 1 cent.

I had used over 8 hosts before I settled for HostGator and used them happily for over two years before I had to move on to PowerVPS due to increased requirements. Even today I hear rave reviews about them just so frequently even though they have become one of the largest hosts out there.

The package I recommend is the Baby Plan at $9.95 a month plan. Now if you host 20 sites on this account, it turns out to be less than 50 cents a month! Click this link and then use the coupon Jury to get the first month for just 1 cent.

Even though they offer insanely high space and bandwidth, they don’t have the crazy restrictions like which I have mentioned above. And furthermore, they are a company with pockets deep enough to back these claimed quotes in case some customers ever reach the levels.

They also offer unlimited add-on domains and on-click install for all popular software. What this means is that you can have as many domains as you want on your account.

And with a click of a button, you can install software like WordPress, Joomla, PhpBB and Coppermine among others on your site. Yes, this means that you can setup a site without having any technical skills.

To Signup with HostGator, follow this link and then use the coupon Jury, you will get your first month for just 1 cent. http://www.awltovhc.com/image-2829075-10410811

Remember — a good host means that you will be able to concentrate on developing, promoting and monetizing your websites. And yes, I know from my personal experience that HostGator is one of them.

How to (Really) Make Money with Domain Names

New here? Be sure to subscribe to the RSS feed so you don’t miss anything!

When I started writing this, my first sentence was “The time for making easy money with domain names has passed.” It didn’t take me long to realize, though, that there never really has been any easy money in domains.

  • Think it was easy to invest $70 each for domains back in the mid-90s when no one could really be sure at all that the Internet was going to be as life-changing as it has proven to be?
  • Think it was easy to figure out the drop system so you could snatch up expiring domains before anyone else?
  • Think it was easy to work like a dog and max out your credit cards once domain names were a proven commodity?

I don’t think anyone who’s gotten rich off domain names would tell you that it was ever easy. The landscape has changed immensely, but what makes it hard now is just different than what made it hard 10+ years ago.

I can tell you what I know now beyond a shadow of a doubt, though: if you want a low-risk, high-return way to make money with domains today, forget buying and holding. Buy a handful a good generic domains and start right now developing them.

Forget Buying and Holding

Rick Schwartz BiddingI love Rick Schwartz’s model: find top-tier generics at a good price and hold them for a few years until someone wants to pay you big bucks for them. That’s how you make several hundred thousand dollars at a time.

Unless you have significant wad of cash lying around, though, you’re relegated to trying to turn $260 into $8,000. Success stories like that are great, but ask yourself:

  1. For every successful domain investment that you make, how many failures would you have?
  2. How many deals like this would you have to do to keep food on the table and clothes on your kids?
  3. Think you could keep it up consistently?
  4. When you’re done buying and selling, what sort of equity would you have to show for it?

To me, domain buying and selling is like day-trading: yeah, you hear about some stellar returns, but the risks are just as high (or higher). For every Frank Schilling or Kevin Ham, there are tons more people who lost their shirts (and more) trying to do the same thing.

The Big, Safe Money is in Development

If you want to make big, safe money with domains today — without laying out big money like Rick — here’s what you want to do:

  1. Find some good generic domain names that:
    1. You can get for a good price.
    2. Are in topic areas that you’re passionate about
  2. Focus your efforts on building those out and driving more and more defensible traffic to them.

Your only risk is the money you use to buy the domains –which you totally control — and the time you spend building them out. That’s it. What you end up with in return, though, are very valuable assets that any number of people will be interested in — not just other domain speculators.

That’s because most domain buyers today “are not sellers and even more do not develop.” Because of that, developing a good domain means that not only will it still be interesting to a domainer somewhere down the road, it will also be interesting to a much wider range of people who are looking for established businesses and have no interest in playing the domain market.

Anytime you can take an asset from one market and turn it into one with much wider appeal, the value increases by default: more buyers = more demand = higher price.

When You Come to a Fork in the Road, Take It

Like I said, I still really like Rick’s model, and I agree with Andy that Warren Buffet would recommend investing in premium generics. It’s just that I don’t know many people who have Buffet-type money.

So if you find yourself wanting to get into the domain business without cashing out your 401(k), just take the other path. It’s a low-risk, high-payoff strategy that has worked out great not only for me, but for many others as well.

How to Make money with Domain Names?

Do you know that there are many internet users who directly type-in the domain names on their web browsers. It could be a domain names of an existing websites or blogs or a domain names of websites under construction or totally non-existing, unregistered domain names.

Making Money With Domain Parking

Pay-per-click (PPC) advertising sites, including Google, grab the opportunity of making money with parked domain names or domain names of websites or blogs under construction. They place PPC ads on these domain names to capture the type-in web traffic. If these domain names are accessed by the internet users, they display and advertising links. Every click to these PPC ad links makes money to the PPC sites and to the owner of the domain name. See these examples by typing these Domain names in your web browser: work-at-home-faqs.com or make-money-quick-ways.com.

Google offers an Adsense program for parked domain pages. Google uses its technology to analyze and understand the meaning of the domain names. So, AdSense for parked domain names delivers targeted advertisements to help the users find what they’re searching for. See more of Google’s FAQs on Adsense program for Domain Parking.

However, Google’s Adsense for parked domain pages is offered to domain name registrars and large domain name holders only. But don’t worry, there are popular domain parking sites that will help you make money with parked domain names for holders of few domain names. They partnered with PPC sites to place PPC ads on their parked domain names. Some of popular domain parking sites are Sedo, Parked.com and TrafficClub. They offer revenue share on PPC ads to holders of few domain names. GoDaddy is also offering this Domain Parking scheme in its Cash Parking program (under “Domains” Drop-down menu), but with monthly fee.

Making Money by Trading Domain Names

Trading Domain names is a very good home business to make money online. Domain names are treated as trading product and real estate property that you can buy and sell. You buy domain names at lower price and sell at a very high price in the future. You may buy a domain name by registering it with Domain name registrar for a minimum of one year. You must have seen at Sedo the prices of domain names offered for sale and sold. And fortunately, Netfirms offer a very good promo on domain name registration with Whois Privacy that hides the real owner’s confidential information from public view. You may also try other big Domain registrars like GoDaddy.

Choosing The Right Domain Names

Choosing Domain name is the challenging part of making money with Domain names. Here are the tips on choosing the right Domain names that make money:

1. Choose and register keyword with “.com” top-level domain. Most of the internet users type-in the name of website or the keyword with “.com” at web browsers.

2. Avoid using dash in Domain name. Normally, internet users do not use dash in the keyword name of the websites or blogs. If you are building your own website or blog in the future, you may choose Domain name with dash as search engines give some points to the keywords in Domain name.

3. Use Search keyword tool like Google Keyword Tool. This will show you the no. and the average of searches in a month, for the keyword and synonyms of your chosen the domain name.

4. Choose one to two keyword Domain names like Website.com and TopWebsite.com. You may use more than two keywords if the name is really popular or potentially have a high demand in future.

5. Search and register Domain names with popular keywords. Below are the ways of finding or choosing popular main keywords for domain names. Always look out for the keywords that are popular in the world, in other countries, in your country and in your local area, both in English and other languages:

  1. Name of popular websites or blogs, hosted in free hosting sites like Blogger (blog-name.blospot.com), WordPress (blog-name.wordpress.com), Bravenet (site-name.bravenet.com) and Tripod (site-name.tripod.com).
  2. Names of popular websites or blogs with different registered domain name. You may find popular blogs and websites at Technorati.com, Digg.com and other top blog and website directories and networks.
  3. Names of popular places like big cities, provinces, tourist destinations, restaurants, disco houses and other top locations.
  4. Names of rich and famous people like celebrities, businessmen, bloggers, webmasters, politicians, professors, students, reporters, news casters, broadcasters, scientists, inventors, government officials, association officers, club officers and activists.
  5. Names of famous companies including their brands and products, offline and online.
  6. Names of famous structures like buildings and towers.
  7. Names or titles of famous events to be held likes shows, exhibitions, car racing, and tournaments.
  8. Titles of famous books and magazines including gazettes, newsletters, school papers, comics and other reading materials.
  9. Names of famous animals and plants including insects, flowers, vegetables, trees and fruits.
  10. Popular games and sports like football, soccker, rugby, baseball, basketball, tennis, volleyball, billiards, boxing, and cricket.
  11. Top keywords like top, popular, famous, top1, top10, top7, top100, hot and other superlative words like most, best, highest, greates, and
    biggest.
  12. Feminine words like girls, female, lady, gals, sexy and beautiful.
  13. Common misspelling of popular websites and keywords. For example, google.com is typed as gogol.com or gogle.com while yahoo.com as yahu.com. Here is a very helpful Keyword Typo Generator Tool that generates suggested likely human misspellings and typos.
  14. All popular names, things and words including slang and hybrid words.

6. Take note of the famous or popular things, words and events you’ve encountered, discovered or heard.

Benefits of Making Money with Domain Names

  1. You make money while you are building your own website or blog.
  2. If you have an idle domain name, you make money without additional cost.
  3. With Domain parking, you make money without doing anything even while you’re sleeping.
  4. You get quotations from interested buyers without spending a dime.
  5. You may earn thousands of dollars as profit in selling your domain names.

Disadvantages of Making Money with Domain Names

  1. You need to invest some amount of money for buying or registering Domain names.
  2. If your Domain name is not sold within a year, you have to pay for its renewal for another year.
  3. You need time and effort to research for a profitable domain name.
  4. You may lose some amount in you’ve not chosen a profitable Domain name.

Domain auction link

here is the place where you can take a sneak peek to our future money

www.tdnam.com ( godaddy auction )
www.sedo.com

And have much more again just search it at google..

Google is the best for searching hehehe… ( maybe only my private thought )

Domains Availability

Best checking domains availability

www.domainsbot.com

private advise:
open it 24 hours and when some word fall to you head .. check it here…. and ready to dream about it… maybe your word will be sold at $xxx.xxx hehehehe….

keep trying.. :P