FreshStore.com sold for $8,100

Posted on 23 May 2020 by NamePros Daily

Today: 2-Letter .COM Domains – What You Want to Know About Them / Searching existing keyword domains… / Buying Aged Domain or website Wanted – addiction niche – Budget: Up to $10,000.00 / and More…

Here are the new discussions that caught my eye in the domain community today:

Buying 4L .com ending in ‘c’, ‘a’, ‘i’, ‘l’, ‘r’, ‘s’, ‘x’ – Budget: Up to $1,000.00 – Be sure to check your portfolio for one of these four-letter .com domain assets ending one of the following letters: c, a, i, l, r, s, or x. If you have what this buyer is looking for it could be a chance at some quick spending cash.

Buying Pronounceable 4L .com – Budget: Up to $1,000.00 – Are you holding a pronounceable four-letter .com that you would be willing to liquidate for fast cash this weekend? If so, check ut this investors guideline.

Domain hack domain’s wanted – Budget: Up to $500.00 – When it comes to domain name hacks, this buyer has a budget for a quick sale if you need the money. Take a look at their specified criteria.

Buying Aged Domain or website Wanted – addiction niche – Budget: Up to $10,000.00 – Double-check your portfolio for one of these aged domains or domains plus websites in the addiction niche that this buyers is looking for. This could be a chance to liquidate for some reinvestment capital.

Searching existing keyword domains… – When it comes to your initial keyword research for a specific niche you want to invest in, are there specific tools you like to use more than others? How do you find what you’re looking for? Share your strategy and compare notes with what other investors use.

2-Letter .COM Domains – What You Want to Know About Them – Do you have any unanswered questions when it comes to two-letter .com domain name assets? Ask questions you’ve always wanted to know the answer too and check out what some domain investors are saying about them.

FreshStore.com sold for $8,100 – That’s not a bad domain name sales report for a ten-letter, two-word, .com domain names for a high-four-figures. Do you think it should have sold for more or less than it sold for?

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