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Retweet.com issues official Press Release on $250,000 sale, discusses Flippa for flipping sites/domains

retweet website

Retweet.com issued an official press release today about the sale of the website for $250,000 – a sale that received a lot of mainstream press coverage. 

The press release also discusses Flippa.com, the web site used to “Flip” the Retweet.com website after less than a year of being online. 

I covered Retweet.com back in the early days, even before the web site launched after it was mistakingly listed on NameJet for auction.  Then when the site launched and started climbing in traffic, to its meteoric rise in visitors that gave its next biggest competitor Tweetmeme a run for their money.

A look at the official press release

Retweet.com – a service that aggregates Twitter to help people find real-time news on popular stories – has just sold on Flippa.com for $250,000.

San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) March 12, 2010 — With zero revenue but generating millions of visitors every month, the seven-month-old Retweet.com was the subject of a hotly-contested auction on the Flippa marketplace. The site received forty-five bids over three weeks before the site finally sold. The knock out bid from an unknown investor was $48,000 higher than the previous bidder.

Since Flippa launched its website marketplace in June 2009 there has been a steady increase in the volume and prices of websites being traded. However, the recent successful sale of Retweet is the highest price paid for a virtual property in the Flippa.com marketplace.

Dave Slutzkin, the General Manager at Flippa commented: “The market’s growing so fast! We’re now seeing over $400k+ of websites sold every week, and this week will be bigger again. Although it doesn’t compare to other markets such as property and stocks, the significant increases every week show that there are big opportunities.”

Flippa is one of a growing number of sites that facilitate the trading of virtual property online, otherwise known as flipping. The auction mechanism is similar to eBay – website owners list their site on Flippa and bidders then compete for the prize, with the highest bidder winning the auction.

The term “flipping” was originally coined by property investors. On the Internet, “flipping websites” involves purchasing existing sites, adding value to them, then reselling them for a profit. However, despite the name, not all participants on Flippa are actually flippers – many are investors who buy and hold websites as investments that produce ongoing revenue.

The high price paid for Retweet seems initially surprising as the business doesn’t earn any revenue. Most of the higher selling sites traded on Flippa are businesses that generate profits, so buyers are able to value these sites as they would a bricks and mortar business. It appears the new owner of Retweet.com sees significant value in the domain name, the brand and the large volumes of traffic that the website receives.

As the leading marketplace for buying and selling websites, Flippa continues to improve functionality to facilitate large transactions such as the recent Retweet sale. The marketplace is currently in the process of integrating functionality of the Escrow.com site, to allow buyers and seller to have a higher level of confidence in their trade in virtual property.

About Flippa.com Pty Ltd:
Flippa.com is the largest global marketplace for buying and selling established websites. It has traded over $30 million in virtual property and presently lists more than 600 new auctions every week.

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This is one Category Killer domain name that will “Fly Off the Charts”; Fly.net Expires, Unbelievable

FlyMost domainers might be familiar with past sales of “fly” domains. Fly.com sold for a whopping $1.5 million in 1999 and was acquired in 2009 by Travelzoo for $1.8 million.   Fly.co.uk sold for $181,042, Fly.co.za sold for $65,000 in 2010, and even Fly.ma sold for over $4,000 in 2007 via Sedo. Domain owners work in mysterious ways, and fly.net is one example.

The domain name expired on March 4, 2010 and is up for auction over at NameJet with a mere 4 bidders and a high pre-bid of $300. The domain itself gets over 1,000 unique visitors per month alone according to Compete and it’s a keyword that is searched globally over 1 million times per month. That’s an exact match type.

Why Fly.net expired, is anyone’s guess

The original owner of the domain going back to 1997, Chris Townsend, also owns slack.net – which is still an active and registered name. Fly.net is a huge domain to let expire, so either Chris Townsend has been slacking on renewals or for other reasons — the name just hasn’t been renewed.

If this name makes it to Auction on April 8, it’s going to be one whopper of an auction on NameJet.

UPDATE: Shortly after we ran this story, the owner of Fly.net renewed the domain name.  Although NameJet still has the domain listed for PreRelease, when NameJet refreshes their database today, the name will no longer be up for auction.

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WeddingGift.com, WeddingGifts.com: Pair of Domains Sell for $160,000

Wedding GiftsSedo GreatDomains has been ringing up some significant sales recently. The premium domains auction site and parking program, also reported the sale of MusicVideos.com for $250,000. The competition for auction sites and domain parking programs has heated up over the last few years, but Sedo continues to beat the competition.

The new owner of the category-killer names (WeddingGifts.com and WeddingGift.com) has not been revealed while the registrant information points to Sedo Transfer Service – but the pair of Wedding Gift names managed to attract one savvy investor – who moved to acquire both the singular and plural to own the .com category.

The keywords “Wedding gifts” was searched globally (exact match) in the month of January approximately 110,000 times, while “wedding gift” was searched over 40,000 times. For comparison purposes, “birthday gifts” was search just over 130,000 times globally and “gifts” reached 1 million searches.

Other Notable Wedding Domain Sales

Weddings.org sold for $34,500 in 2008 in a Private Sale

WeddingPlace.com sold for $16,000 in 2008 on Afternic

WeddingChocolates.com sold for $12,611 in 2006 on SnapNames

GayWedding.com sold for $10,100 in 2008 on Sedo

WeddingCatering.com sold for $10,000 in 2007 on Moniker

WeddingGift.net sold for $3,600 in 2008 on NameJet

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$800,000 Sale of Domain Guns.com Shatters 2010 .com record; Previous Sales of “Gun” Domains

Chicks with GunsRon Jackson of DNJournal, the domain industry news magazine, is reporting that Moniker has brokered the sale of Guns.com for $800,000 shattering the 2010 .com sales records of .com domains by over 100 percent. The next highest .com sale of 2010 is PartySupplies.com for $360,000 which was also sold at Moniker, followed by Biking.com and Boating.com each for $250,000 which sold on Afternic in February.

Though the buyer hasn’t been disclosed, for the price tag of $800,000, it’s hard to imagine this name not being developed. In terms of visitor traffic, the URL guns.com had over 13,000 visitors in January 2010, and reached as many as 30,000 unique visitors in January 2009. As far as the search engines, GunBroker.com ranks at the top with over 1.5 million unique visitors per month for the search term “guns”. ImpactGuns.com gets nearly half a million visitors, followed by NRA.org with almost 200,000 visitors.

Here is some of what Ron Jackson had to say about the transaction:

You might recall that Guns.com was in Moniker’s live auction at the DOMAINfest Global conference in January but did not meet reserve. After that event Moniker brokers continued to work hard to close a deal for the category defining domain and have now succeeded. The name was transferred on Friday and the WhoIs record currently has privacy listings…

Previous Sales of Gun Domain Names

If you’re curious about previous sales of Gun-related domain names, here’s a list of sales pulled from NameBio:

GunVendor.com sold for $28,000 on Sedo in July 2009

SpearGuns.com sold for $14,000 on Monkier in April 2009

PaintballGun.com sold for $10,299 on NameJet in December 2008

GunSpace.com sold for $5,000 on Afternic in April 2008

Guns.tv sold for $140 on Sedo in June 2008

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It’s MIND-BOGGLING to see the domains that expire, especially when they appraise in the six-figures

Mind BogglingIt truly is mind-boggling to see the domain names that individuals and organizations allow to expire.  Some of the most promising domains end up on the aftermarket and fetch top dollar by buyers. 

It’s not the owners who reap the rewards though.  It’s the business savvy aftermarket companies and their partnerships with the registrars who make out big.  Everyone has their reasons for letting domains expire – they forget to renew the domain, they go bankrupt, they just don’t care — the list goes on and on.  But when it’s simply a mistake or oversight, it’s one of those things that give domainers a chance to pick up a great name at a great price.

Top domainers like Frank Schilling made a killing in the early 2000s when many gave up on the power of the internet and let their domains expire.  And he’s amassed a portfolio of domains that is virtually unmatched. Yun Ye, who sold his portfolio of names he snapped up on the drop, raked in millions.

It is Mind Boggling in this day in Age
 
While the number of killer names that are dropping will never equal the flow of names in the early 2000s, great domains are still dropping all the time and that’s why it’s amazing to see some of the names that end up on the aftermarket. 

Take TennisCourts.com for example.  The domain name expired on February 26, 2010, and it’s now up for auction on NameJet.  The name is appraised at $114,000 according to Valuate.com.

CRG also known as the Customer Relations Group allowed CustomerRelations.com to expire.  It expired on February 23 and is now up for auction on NameJet, as well. Valuate.com appraises the name at $13,000.  Customcabinetry.com expired on February 11.  It’s valued at $15,000.  The list is endless.

While the volume of GREAT expiring names has certainly slowed down over the last 10 years, the volume of drops is still high, given the number of subpar domain names like 18900000000.net  (which is also on NameJet) that someone chose to register. 

But if you have the time, there is plenty of opportunity for you to turn someone else’s oversight, into something big for yourself.