Why you shouldn’t register short-words in every extension

Posted on 13 September 2025 by NamePros Daily

Today: .nf – Norfolk Island – ccTLD (Country-Code Top-Level Domain) / FJN.com sold for $23,389 / Why I disagree with registered TLDs as a standard of value and More…

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

.nf – Norfolk Island – ccTLD (Country-Code Top-Level Domain) – Are you currently investing into any .nf ccTLD’s or thinking about it? In either case, this in-depth analysis of the .nf extension could prove to be a great addition to your existing research.

FJN.com sold for $23,389 – That’s not a bad looking domain name sales report for a three-letter, short, brandable-acronym, .com domain for five-figures. Do you think it should have sold for more or less than what it sold for?

Why I disagree with registered TLDs as a standard of value – Do you agree or disagree with leveraging the number of extensions a word is register in to determine the value of a domain name? Check out what’s been said about it so far.

Why you shouldn’t register short-words in every extension – It’s true, not every extension or combination is created equal. Just because a word is taken in 300+ extensions, doesn’t mean the work will have any value in more than just a few of them. Take a look at what this veteran in the domain industry just said about it.

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