sawsells
sawsells
www.Saw.com
11 posts
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
sawsells · 5 years ago
Text
Oh no! The Domain I want to buy is taken!
Buying a domain name and securing your company’s brand is a serious undertaking. The result of this process will be what broadcasts your company worldwide. What do you do if the domain name that fits your brand so perfectly is already taken? Securing the services of an experienced, well-respected domain name broker with a decade of experience like me comes into play. The Domain you are looking to buy may have been originally hand registered or purchased on the secondary market for various reasons. The Domain may have been obtained for a project that never took off; a branding company could have bought a slew of domains for a client that no longer fits their vision, or may have been purchased by a domain investor looking to make a return on their purchase. Whatever the reason, the web domain name you want to buy is owned by another party. It will be in your best interest to use our domain buy service domain to inquire and negotiate the terms of sale on your behalf. Why? First and foremost, confidentiality is critical. It will be in the buyers’ best interest to keep their identity confidential throughout the purchase process. Keeping the buyers’ information private will play a vital role in buying the Domain at the lowest and best price. The size of the inquiring parties’ business, or the amount of funding they have received, will have a direct effect on the perceived value the domain owner thinks the Domain is worth. Let’s face it, people that own domains tend to be more technically savvy than most. They are going to use as many of their resources as possible to their advantage. All negotiations start by piecing together the puzzle that leads to the seller, which can be a long road. A veteran domain name broker like me has a strong network of sellers we have created relationships with. Those relationships can pay off exponentially in moving the process along, receiving a fair price or something as simple as even getting a response. The domain owner could be an individual, Fortune 500 company , or a small business owner. Either way, a great domain name broker will know the right way to get in touch with the decision-maker for selling the Domain. The more experience matched with a strong network increases the chances of buying the Domain. A seasoned domain name broker will provide clients with guidance on price expectations based on trends within the domain industry, recent comparable sales of other domain names, and other determinants. Understanding the value of a domain name before entering into negotiations will impact the buyers’ return on their purchase. Domain brokers with years of expertise in negotiating and buying website domain names for their clients will pay dividends for their clients. Negotiations are a dance between buyer and seller. When a broker is not involved, it, at times, can get overly emotional for one of the parties and possibly lead to the loss of the sale. A domain name broker is not personally invested in the project, has experienced every objection or situation there most likely will be, and has a solution for it. One of the most potent weapons in my arsenal is education. I find myself educating sellers about the domain market and the sales process more often than not, even when representing the buyer. When the price is agreed upon, the brokers’ duties do not end. We walk both parties through contract negotiations, escrow, and the transfer of the Domain. Buyers and sellers typically have mixed opinions on contract verbiage and terms. Domain brokers assist in getting both parties to agree and execute the contract quickly without sacrificing the opportunity. We handhold both parties through the escrow process and give guidance on the necessary steps to secure the Domain’s funding in place securely. Once the monies are received, we assist in the transfer or push of the Domain to the buyer’s desired registrar account as quickly and smoothly. Experienced domain name brokers like the team at Saw.com always put our clients’ best interests first. Our team strives to help our clients get their desired domain name. If, for whatever reason, the Domain you had your heart set on is not available, we have access to almost limitless other domains that fit every budget. Many of our clients have come to us looking for one Domain, and end up buying something else and being much happier with plan b. If you are interested in purchasing a domain contact me, Brooke Hernandez: https://Saw.com/buy [email protected] 1(781)281-4875 x701 The post Oh no! The Domain I want to buy is taken! appeared first on Saw.com - Blog .
0 notes
sawsells · 5 years ago
Text
Saw Video – Media.com is For Sale!
Media.com is for sale , available for purchase through Saw.com . Watch Amanda Waltz discuss the potential opportunities to be had by owning Media.com. If you’re interested in purchasing Media.com, contact Brooke at [email protected]. Transcript Hey, it’s Amanda Waltz from SAW.com. I wanted to let everybody know about a unique opportunity that we have available with Media.com. We all seem to be glued to our TVs and our phones and our different platforms lately, trying to filter through so many different news streams and feeds at this point. I think that Media.com would be a great opportunity for somebody who is looking to come in and consolidate all of these different options. If you are interested in hearing and learning more above the opportunity to own Media.com, please get in touch with Brooke at [email protected] . The post Saw Video – Media.com is For Sale! appeared first on Saw.com - Blog .
0 notes
sawsells · 5 years ago
Text
Saw Video – Ballet.com is For Sale!
Ballet.com is for sale for the first time! Watch Amanda Waltz, Saw.com co-founder, discuss potential business opportunities for Ballet.com. This domain offers a great branding opportunity as well. If you’re interested in purchasing Ballet.com, contact Amanda Waltz at [email protected]. Transcript Hi, this is Amanda Waltz from SAW.com . Today I wanted to let you all know that we have Ballet.com for sale . This is the first time that BALLET has been available; it’s been within the same family for the last 20 years who are the original registrants. What Ballet.com has to offer to a new buyer is a clean slate. The only time that this has ever been used is for the previous families dance studio. Like so many others that are in use right now; opera.com , symphony.com , orchestra.com ; Ballet.com can offer a clean slate for a number of businesses. It could be used in the dance industry or it could be used in software. Or, it could be used in the space for at-home fitness. The possibilities are really endless. If you’d like to know more about Ballet.com, please get in touch with me, [email protected]. Thank you. The post Saw Video – Ballet.com is For Sale! appeared first on Saw.com - Blog .
0 notes
sawsells · 5 years ago
Text
Your Domain Name Does Matter in Search Results – Microsoft Says So!
I stumbled upon a study conducted by Microsoft eons ago back in the paleolithic era of search; 2012… It is about how “premium domains” are perceived by the consumer when seeing them in the search results compared to a lower value “non-premium” domain. I posted the article on Circle ID , and I also linked it to the study Microsoft Conducted a while ago. This study conducted by such a reputable source proves there are a lot of misconceptions about the value of domains. Regularly we hear objections from buyers along the lines of: “I will just register a domain and SEO it!” “Domains just aren’t worth what they used to be anymore.” The study might be a few years old, but the human brain and how it reacts has not changed much in eight years. Here is the article summarizing the results of the study: http://www.circleid.com/posts/20200618-your-domain-name-does-matter-in-search-results-microsoft-says-so/ Here is the study: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/domainbias.pdf The post Your Domain Name Does Matter in Search Results – Microsoft Says So! appeared first on Saw.com - Blog .
0 notes
sawsells · 5 years ago
Text
Co-founder Interview for Digital Marketing Podcast with Bill Hartzer
In March, Jeff Gabriel, Saw.com co-founder was interviewed by Bill Hartzer from the Digital Marketing Podcast. In the interview, Jeff provides his knowledge and expertise on all things domains. He gets into domain investing, appraisals , acquisitions , sales , and portfolio management. Click here to listen to the interview. Transcript Bill Hartzer – Okay hi this Bill Hartzer and today is March 5th, 2020.  This is the digital marketing podcast with Bill Hartzer, digital marketing with Bill Hartzer podcast, and I have Jeff Gabriel from SAW.com and we’re talking specifically about domain names and dot coms that you know; whatever.com , Hartzer.com,  SAW.com , tell me a little bit about yourself Jeff and how you got into the domain name business. Jeff Gabriel – Sure and thank you Bill for having me as always.  I got my start many moons ago, close to ten years ago at Sedo. Prior to that, I was doing numerous sales jobs and I came to Sedo because I thought their business model was something really interesting I didn’t know. If you remember the old Sedo site it would have all the auctions and domains for sale. It’s changed a little bit but it’s still relatively similar, and I was like, “What is this?” I used to actually try to sell products to them, HR staffing products, and when the economy kind of imploded on itself a little over ten years ago I went back to companies that I thought had interesting business models and Sedo was one of them. I worked there for a number of years where I sold sex.com for thirteen million. That was the highest .com sale for a while but it’s recently been broken obviously. GoDaddy sold voice.com  for thirty million, money.com  sold for twenty million and 360.com sold for 17 million. I’ll still be happy to take fourth place and the other thing is I’m happy to see that my record’s been broken multiple times because that’s showing us that the market is growing, and the value of domains continues to rise. I sold it in 2010, so I mean ten years later if I was still the top sale I’d be worried, I wouldn’t think that the market was growing. So, then I left Sedo and I founded a company called Domain Advisors, we rebranded that to Igloo that sold to Brand IT or Brand It, however you want to call it. From there, I worked at Uniregistry which was called Main Aim Sales prior to that for just under seven years, built a sales team from four of us to just under forty people. We did over three hundred million or three hundred fifty million dollars in sales in my tenure there and it was a wonderful time, great experience. I left there that’s recently sold to GoDaddy for I think close to one hundred ninety million dollars, one hundred eighty-six I think is that the word on the street. I’ve launched Saw.com recently,; we officially launched in mid-December. I really am counting the first of January because you’re still working on some of the technology. I think like that, so we just launched, and it’s been great. We have myself, three salespeople working with me, including my co-founder Amanda Waltz and we have a good little team of support staff as well.  Even you, you’ve helped us immensely in our business so it’s been a really great experience. It’s great to see that the little piston engines running – one of the cylinders was running but now we got all full bar chugging so hopefully in a few months it will turn into a nice six-cylinder and then an eight-cylinder and then a twelve-cylinder and it’ll really start to fire and really get going.  I’m happy to be here I’m excited to be here so let’s talk some domains. Bill – Yes, so acquiring domains … I mean let’s talk a little bit about the process of starting a new business. You’re trying to get a brand and you look and see whether the Twitter handle and the Facebook page and the different handles that are available. But then you find what is available, and also, ideally, whether the dot-com is available as well. It’s a little bit difficult now, more and more, to find a good dot-com that’s not already taken. Certainly, then the next step is to approach the owner and figure out how much the domain is worth and whether or not you even should spend a fair amount. So, you know how to domain. Jeff – I think that’s the question that a lot of people should ask themselves right, is and look themselves in the mirror and say, “What are my goals for this company, how long do I want to be involved in this company, and where do I want to take it?” Also, what is the style of your business? Are you relying on especially your business to consumers? Are you relying on repeat business word-of-mouth marketing? Are you relying on somehow establishing credibility quite quickly to get conversions to happen? Having a half-assed domain name is not a good thing and you cannot tell me one company that has a half-assed domain name that’s a household name. A domain that has one with a dash in it or is really long or it’s just really bad. Market leaders have usually a very strong dot-com domain and it gets so ingrained in people. This is an extreme example that I’m gonna give you but I urge anybody who uses Google as a search engine to switch to Yahoo for a week and tell me if you can actually do it. When I type in Google, even if I say Yahoo out loud, I type in Google like my fingers are trained. I’m trained for Amazon and they also do come trained for other places that they go to on a regular basis and those domains 99.9% of the time are dot-coms. The only one that I go to that’s a major player that’s a dot anything else on a regular basis is Verizon to pay my phone bill. Verizon dot net is really one of the only big ones that is not dot-com. They’re just still pushing that dot net. But not everyone has, including me, a million dollars to spend on a domain name. But it’s saddening to me to see companies that are spending more money on a printer or on a coffee maker than they are on their domain. So can’t tell me any other way, if your domain name is really poor but you’re spending millions in other places or hundreds of thousands in other places, that you aren’t looking at the front door to your business. In order to be taken seriously, you really need that. I find it interesting to see a lot of these startups using the dot IO the dot AI the dot CC. You know, I don’t know if people even realize that dot IO is Indian Ocean and it’s a CC TLP, and ccTLDs go to their own rules and regulations. You could wake up one day just like the Chinese did on dot CM and said you have to be a Chinese citizen in order to own these domains and what would happen if something similar happens there and your business is totally built on that IO? You’re in trouble. The other thing is that if you walk down the street and you tell someone about cars dot IO. How many people in the public actually even know that exists or what that means? They don’t. So we’re going to spend a lot of money to change that perception and change habit to get them to go to your business or to convert over radio advertising. We’re both advertising conference advertising and then you get into email and email security with phishing. What would happen if a scammer got the dot-com on you or something similar to your brand or the dot-net and started hitting your customers or your customers are emailing them or something? You have the dot CO, they hit him with the dot-net or anything like that. There is a lot to do with security these days and privacy and people have held companies hostage based on this stuff. So there are many levels and reasons why you should have the right domain and it’s important. If you have a small budget, there are ways that you can find maybe a second tier rather than your sex dot-com or cars dot-com. You could go and spend ten million dollars but you easily can find domains that are two thousand, five thousand, eight thousand, ten thousand dollars, and a lot of the sellers that I work with on a regular basis would even let you pay for them over time. So there is no real excuse if you’re really serious about building something. You can get something good and you know that’s one of the things that we specialize in. We hear what entrepreneurs, visionaries, ideas guys, or established businesses have to tell us about where their business is, where they want to bring it, and the money they have to spend. We use this information to see how we can make it work and then we go out there and we find them some good solid options at reasonable prices based on what their goals are. And like anything in life, you need to pay for quality and need to pay for the best and that’s just the way it is. Bill – Yeah, I mean nowadays especially, we start to think about, even in the past week, with everybody talking about companies going remote. That means if you’re remote it’s online and more and more people are online and that domain is one of the first things or the thing that people see all the time in the web address. So it’s that branding that they’re seeing over and over again. It needs to be presented in the best light as possible. There are several parts to marketing… having a good brand, having a good name, having a good logo, having the right colors and color scheme, and good web design. But again, having a good domain presents your company and your business in the best light possible. And we talked earlier about some companies that are using ones that are not dot-coms. Think about Zoom… dot-us right? I think you mentioned that to me the other day. I mean there are not many out there that are not a lot of major companies out there that are not using a strong dot-com. Jeff – Yeah. Especially in the United States, right? Yeah, I feel like when I travel to Canada, dot-CA is quite strong. I think if you use dot-CA in the US, a lot of people think it’s dot-California, right? But I travel quite a lot, and Zoom.us is a company that I see with billboards all over airports throughout the United States and internationally. I scratch my head about it because I know the person that used to own the domain name for a period of time. He doesn’t own it anymore, and I’m sure he would have worked out monthly payments with Zoom even if the price was exorbitant for them to pay that on a monthly basis and fit that into their budget. But they’d rather spend it on those billboards. Then, at the same time, their potential customers are going to the dot-com that could have other pictures on it. It could have something totally different and they’re like, then that opportunity is gone. How much money are you leaking out of the bucket with holes? It just doesn’t really make sense to me. One of the examples I was thinking about talking about today is a domain we’re selling called login dot-com. And we’re also selling the domain name password dot com and we have companies like one password dot-com and log me in dot-com and dash lane dot-com that we have approached about these domain names to see if they’re interested. And it’s been radio silence with no interest. We find it very strange that they, especially Dashlane, had some ads up. They did a Superbowl ad a 30-second Superbowl ad and then they had a blog that they sent the traffic to. There were pictures on both sides of somebody in a robe floating in the air with clouds talking about taking back the internet and you weren’t really sure what they did. In the comment section, somebody said they sell clouds or bathrobes as a joke, and when you visit the site and it’s a one password solution. But if I’m gonna give them five bucks a month, they’re asking you to give them every username and password to your entire life. They’re asking you to give all of your credit card numbers, write everything, and they’re saying they’re gonna protect it on you and their name is Dashlane. I don’t understand and they have a guy in a bathrobe with clouds in the background as their person. I don’t understand, and I don’t feel comfortable giving them all that information. If they own the domain name password dot-com, which is exactly what they’re selling, and then they made the site almost look like it’s a fortress, I’d be a little more into it. I mean, at the very least, I’m gonna go and talk to maybe log me in. The log me part doesn’t really make sense because you don’t say “log me in.” I feel like someone’s trying to bang on the door. I would think that login is probably a better name for their business. It’s more memorable, it creates more credibility, it’s easier to spell, you can advertise it on the radio. it is it checks off every single basic box of marketing. It hits all the basic marketing rules and it’s perfect for any of these three businesses. So you know, I find it strange that those three haven’t. I mean, we’ve still got interest from other parties but those three players haven’t shown interest. I guess I’m kind of calling them out here today on your blog. Hopefully, they’re listening and I’d love to have a fruitful conversation. Bill – kind of recently though, let’s look at Amazon. Amazon originally sold just books, and now Amazon has nothing to do really with what the word is. So there are exceptions out there as far as branding goes. Another example is Target, which makes me think about target practice or something. Jeff What do Amazon and Target have in common? They’re one word. Bill Hartzer Yes, that’s very true. There is a lot of money, unfortunately, in branding at this point over the years and sure. Jeff I mean and then look at ring dot-com. So ring dot.com is a domain that we sold when I was at Uniregistry. And they sold the company. That company was sold within two or three years of launch to Amazons for over a billion dollars. And the owner of that company, who was an ex-employee of Amazon (I’m not sure if you know this story), said they would never have gotten that valuation and they never would have gotten that purchase price without owning ring. They never would have gotten the market share, they never would have seen the growth that they were supposed to get, and they never would have gotten the purchase price that they got out of Amazon if they ever knew exactly, right? so I think that it’s imperative for some of these companies for market share, that they’re one of the first to the party. I mean, same with one password. They’d love to get a piece of log in’s market share. They’re late to the party, so how do you do it? You find the best possible brand that people are going to trust, and this is a massive leap of faith to any of these companies to give people this kind of information, and I think that that is a perfect opportunity for them to prove that they’re here for a long time. They’re not going to get hacked and that we are the leader in our space. Bill – Sure. Give us a little bit… say I have a domain or a couple of domain names that I bought. Say I woke up in the middle of the night and said “Hey, that’s a great idea for a company I need to go and see if that domain name is available.” I go on my phone and it’s available and I purchased it and now, six months later I haven’t started that project. I still own this domain, but now it’s a year or two later, or it’s eleven and a half months later. Do I renew it or not? How do I figure out that those domains that I bought a while back… how do I figure out if I should drop them? What is the value? How would I go about selling them? Jeff – Okay, so I’m gonna take you through kind of a speed version of this. So the first thing I would do is go to a website like EstiBot. I put the domain name in there and hit enter. I would see what comes up there. I would look at different data which would be comparable sales on there, look at those. Then I would take out the ones that are inferior. So you might see ones I just don’t meet the criteria. If you want to go into great detail, I have a YouTube channel called Saw Sells. We’ll have videos of me teaching how to appraise domains. But this is the lazy way of doing it. I would see what on there kind of catches up to similar quality. Similar quality means if the words make sense phonetically in a sentence and you’ve heard both in words together before that’s a plus and if you haven’t, or it’s the wrong tense or it doesn’t quite make sense, I’d immediately put like a little red X next to that one. Then I would certainly look there, then I would think to myself, “Am I going to do this project if I wake up two years from now? Will I revisit it? Will I regret selling this?” And if the answer is no, it’s probably time to move on. So my suggestion to you would be to go to a website like GoDaddy, put some sort of a low reserve on the domain name, and get rid of it now. If you multiply this, because I know entrepreneurs like myself and like you Bill, the gears are always spinning. So this isn’t something that happens just once, it happens a lot, so then all of a sudden you wake up one morning and now you have 200 or 300 of these and now you’re spending two thousand, three thousand, five thousand, ten thousand dollars a year on renewals on ideas that are never gonna happen and you’re carrying these and even if you’ve invested five hundred or a thousand dollars in this name, take the loss, get your money and move on to the next one. You’re gonna let them go. That’s the best advice I can give you. There are so many people that have come to me that have these big portfolios of thousands of names, carrying them year after year after year. There’s no reason to carry half of these names. And they’re just throwing money in the trash because they spent hundreds of dollars on renewals and they’re just unwilling to let it go. Let it go. Take that money and buy something else. Buy a new dream and move on with it. Get you right off on your taxes and take it. Sometimes you’re gonna make money, and you’ll say, “Wow, that was great!” Bill – Yeah, now there are certainly some exceptions to that. And the ones I would, from my experience if you are actively getting offers [it’s a different story]. I mean it depends on what your definition of actively getting offers is, but if somebody is sending you multiple emails or contacting you giving you an offer, then you probably would keep the name, right? You can’t just drop it. Jeff – it’s like a volcano. It’s popping out a little ash and a little smoke and a little lava and then eventually it’s gonna fill up. So what I would certainly do is I’ve put it on the market places, get it the exposure, put a price on it, get a good landing page. It’s a good little affordable solution to have the leads dumped into your email. You can connect it on to some CRM out there and then work those leads or give a guy like me the opportunity to work on those opportunities. Sure, put it up for sale. Those kinds of names are the best names because there’s demand and I would never let those go. Yeah, the stat that I would look at is if you have one, even one, interested party or two hundreds of parties a year on a name, I probably wouldn’t. I wouldn’t just put it up for auction. I would probably sit on it, right? If it’s making parking and it’s making close to registration so you’re carrying cost is a buck or maybe nothing if you’re making ten cents a year on it I wouldn’t drop it because there are people coming to that name. That’s showing there’s something out there. There’s a pulse, right? So I keep it. But if it’s not making registration it’s not getting inquiries and there’s no action on it. When they give the hot potato to somebody else, take your losses unless you’ve invested a lot of money in it. And let it go. That’s the best advice that I can give you. Bill – Yeah or if there’s any chance that you could potentially develop it or actually have a writer write some content and put it out there.There’s potential for it rather than just having it. Developing it into 5 10 20 page site that potentially could get it going again. Jeff – Yeah. But again, now you’re getting even deeper. And there’s a reason why there’s nothing happening with it in the first place, right? That’s why it was the plan that never took off. The idea that never happens. I had this brilliant idea a long time ago that you can make a party table that was disposable so we’ve come with a bag that you get at the party store for like ten dollars. But then when I figured out what design and engineering involved to make it. And then pitch that to the party store and all these things. I mean I considered how to pay every penny I had in the bank on a chance and I didn’t even understand the industry. Bill – So that was a disposable party table dot-com. Jeff – But that dream is over like it’s over now. So I’d say knowing that even if it had an opportunity nowt, I just have too many other things. Selling domain names for myself is a much more sure bet than me investing all this time, money, and resources and energy into this. It just doesn’t make any sense. Yep, take it off the chin, right? Bill – Sure. So with that said, we’re just about out of time. So thanks for joining me today. How do we get in touch? I know you mentioned your YouTube channel Saw Sells. Or go directly to saw.com . Is that the best way to get in touch? Jeff – Yes, go to the contact page on saw.com. We do domain acquisitions on behalf of buyers, we sell super premium names, we also manage people’s domain portfolios where we work on an entire portfolio where they point their names to us and then we would also be taking some of those names to market and selling them and then appraisal services as well. Bill – All right thanks again Jeff! This has been the Digital Marketing Podcast with Bill Hartzer. Thanks again, Jeff. And we’ll see you Online Jeff – Anytime. Thank you. Unedited Transcript Bill – Okay hi this Bill Hartzer and today is March 5th, 2020.  This is the digital marketing podcast with Bill Hartzer, digital marketing with Bill Hartzer podcast, and I have Jeff Gabriel from SAW.com and we’re talking specifically about domain names and you know dot coms that you know; whatever.com , Hartzer.com,  SAW.com, tell me a little bit about yourself Jeff and how you got into the domain name business. Jeff – Sure and thank you Bill for having me as always.  I got my start many moons ago, close to ten years ago at Sedo.  Prior to that I was doing numerous sales jobs and I came across you know because I thought their business model was something really interesting I didn’t know when I used if you remember the old SETO site it would have all the auctions and domains for sale it’s changed a little bit but it’s still relatively similar, and I was like what is this.  I used to actually try to sell products to them, HR staffing products, and when the economy kind of imploded on itself a little over ten years ago I went back to companies that I thought had interesting business models and Sedo was one of them.  I worked there a number of years where I actually sold sex.com  for thirteen million.  That was the highest .com sale for a while but it’s recently been broken obviously.  GoDaddy sold voice.com  for thirty million, money.com  sold for twenty million and 360.com  sold for 17 million.  I’ll still be happy to take fourth place and the other thing is I’m happy to see that my records been broken multiple times because that’s showing us that the market is growing, and the value of domains continue to rise.  I sold that in 2013 or 2000 2010 I sold it and 2010 I sold it so I mean ten years later if I was still the top sale I’d be worried, I wouldn’t think that the market was growing.  So, then I left SETO and I founded a company called domain advisors, we rebranded that to igloo that sold to brand IT or brand it however you want to call it.  From there worked at unit registry which is called main aim sales prior to that for just under seven years, built a sales team from four of us to just under forty people.  We did over three hundred million or three hundred fifty million dollars in sales and my tenure there and it was a wonderful time, great experience.  I left there that’s recently sold to GoDaddy for I think close to one hundred ninety million dollars, one hundred eighty six I think is that the word on the street.  I’ve launched recently, we officially launched in mid-December I really am counting first of January because you’re still working on some of the technology.  I think like that, so we just launched, and you know it’s been great.  We have myself, three salespeople working with me, including my co-founder Amanda waltz and you know we have a good little team of support staff as well.  Even you, you’ve helped us immensely in our business so it’s been a really great experience it’s great to see that the little piston engines running you know one of the cylinders was running but now we got all full bar chugging so hopefully months will turn into a nice six cylinder and then an eight cylinder and then a twelve cylinder and it’ll really start to fire and really get going.  I’m happy to be here I’m excited to be here so let’s talk some domains. Bill Hartzer yes so acquiring domains I mean it yeah I basically let’s talk a little bit I guess the process of you know sure you know you’re starting a new business you’re trying to get a brand you know you look and see what you know whether the Twitter handle and the Facebook page and the you know different it’s a graham handles that are available but then okay will you what actually find also ideally something that where the dot-com or the you know it is available as well and certainly that’s not you know that not taken so it’s a little bit difficult now you know more and more to find you know finds a dot you know find a good calm that’s not already taken you know certainly then the next step is I guess if we find something I guess would be to you know somehow approach the owner and figure out okay well how you know how much this is this domain worth and you know whether we you know whether or not you even should spend you know a fair amount I mean what you know how to domain Jeff- I think I think that’s the question that a lot of people should ask themselves right is and look themselves in the mirror and say what are my goals for this company how long do I want to be involved in this company right and where do I want to take it and also you know what are what is the style of your business if you are if you are relying on especially your business to consumer right if you’re relying on repeat business word-of-mouth marketing if you’re relying on somehow establishing credibility quite quickly to get conversions to happen having a half-assed domain name is not a good thing right and you cannot tell me one company that has a half-assed domain name that’s a household name one that has one with a dash in it or is really long or it’s just really bad you know your market leaders have usually a very strong dot-com domain all right yeah and it gets so ingrained in people I mean to the point now this is an extreme example that I’m gonna give you but I urge anybody who uses Google as a search engine to switch to Yahoo for a week and tell me if you can actually do it because when I do it I type in Google even if I say Yahoo out loud I type in Google like my fingers are trained it people I’m trained for Amazon and they also do come trained for other places that they go to on a regular basis and those domains 99.9% of the time our comms the only one that I go to that’s a major player that I go to that’s a dot anything else really on a regular basis is Verizon to pay my phone bill you know Verizon net is really one of the only huge big ones so they I believe they also on the comm they’re just still pushing that net but you know not everyone has including myself a million dollars to spend on a domain name sir but it’s saddening to me to see companies that are spending more money on a printer or on you know a coffee maker than they are on their domain so and again you can’t tell me any other way if your domain name is really poor but you’re spending millions in other places or hundreds of thousands other places that you aren’t looking at the front door to your business and in order to be taken seriously you really need that and again you know I find it interesting to see a lot of these startups using the dot IO the dot AI the dot CC. You know, I don’t know if people even realize that dot IO is Indian Ocean and it’s a CC TLP and ccTLDs go to their own rules and regulations I mean you could wake up one day just like the Chinese did on dot CM and said you have to be a Chinese citizen in order to own these domains and what would happen if something similar happen there and your business is totally built on that IO you’re in trouble the other thing is that if you walk down the street and you tell someone cars dot IO how many people in the public actually even know that exists or what that means they don’t so yeah we’re going to spend a lot of money to change that perception and change habit to get them to go to your business or to convert you know over radio Advertising we’re both advertising conference advertising and then you get into sorry I’m taking over your whole podcasts I’m very passionate about this but then you get into like email an email security in fishing what would happen if a scammer got on the dot com  on you or something similar to your brand or the dot net  and started hitting your customers or your customers are emailing them and their back or something you have the dot CO they hit him with the dot net or anything like that there’s a lot to do with security these days and privacy and people have helped companies hostage based on this stuff so there’s many levels and reasons why you should have the right domain and it’s important and if you have a small budget you know there’s ways that you can find maybe a second tier rather than your sex comm or your you know your car’s comm I mean I must say go and spend ten million dollars but you easily can find domains that are between two thousand five thousand eight thousand ten thousand dollars and a lot of the sellers that I work with on a regular basis would even let you pay for them over time so you know there’s no real excuse if you’re really serious about building something that you can’t get something good and you know that’s one of the things that we specialize in in a business is we hear what entrepreneurs visionaries ideas guys or established businesses have to tell us about where their business is where they want to bring it and the money they have to spend and how we can make it work and then we go out there and we find them some good solid options at reasonable prices based on what their goals are and like anything in life you know you need to pay for quality and need to pay for the best and that’s just the way it is Bill Hartzer yeah I mean nowadays especially you know we start to think about yeah even in the past week with all of the everybody talking about companies do you know going remote that means okay if your remote and your remoting in you know that means it’s online and more and more people are you know are using you are sexually you know online and that that you know domain is the one of the first things or the thing that that people see all the time in the web address and so it’s that branding it’s that you know it’s they’re seeing it over and over and over again and you know it needs to you know it does yeah need to be presented in the best white as possible you know you’re it’s you know there are several parts to you know having marketing you know having a good brand which is your you know having a good name having a good you know having a good logo having you know the right colors and color scheme and good web design but again you know the having a good domain really yeah also is presents you know your company and your business in in the best light possible and rather you know we talked earlier you know about you know some domains that are or some companies that are using ones that are not comms you know think about zoom dot us right I think you mentioned that to me the other day you know and I mean you know that there are not many out there that are not you know that are major companies that are that are you know that are you that are not using a strong calm Jeff – yeah especially in the United States right yeah I feel like when you when I travel to Canada dot CA is quite strong I think if you use a dusty in the US a lot of people think it’s dot California right but I travel quite a lot in zoom dot us is a company that I see with billboards all over airports throughout the United States and internationally and I scratch my head about it because I know that I know the person that used to own the domain name for a period of time he doesn’t own it anymore and I’m sure he would have worked out monthly payments with that company even if the price was exorbitant for them to pay that on a monthly basis and fit that into their budget but there’s they’d rather spend it on those billboards and then at the same time their potential customers are going to the dot-com that could have you know other pictures on it could have something totally different and they’re like then that opportunity is going how much money are you leaking out of the bucket with holes it just doesn’t that stuff doesn’t really make sense to me one of the examples I was thinking about talking about today too was there’s a company we’re selling the domain name login comm and we’re also selling the domain name we’re representing it password calm and we have companies like one password calm and log me in and dash lane that we have approached about these three these two domain names to see if they’re interested in and it’s been radio silence and not showing any interest and we find it very strange that especially dashlane they had some ads up they did a Superbowl ad a 30-second Superbowl ad and then they had a blog that they sent the traffic to and there was pictures on both sides of somebody in a robe floating in the air with clouds and in talking about taking back the internet and you weren’t really sure what they did and in the comment section in the comment section somebody said I think it’s a they sell clouds or bathrobes as a joke and then you click on it and it’s a one it’s like a one password solution but if I’m gonna give them they’re asking you for your to pay monthly X amount of dollars it’s like five bucks they’re asking you to give you give them every username and password to your entire life they’re asking you to give all of your credit card numbers write everything and they’re saying they’re gonna protect it on you and their name is dashlane I don’t I don’t understand and they have a guy in a bathrobe with clouds in the background is their person I don’t understand I don’t feel comfortable in getting all that information to them if they own the domain name password calm which is exactly what they’re selling and then they made the site almost look like it’s a fortress I’d be a little more into it to feel safe sure I mean at the very least I’m gonna go and talk to maybe log me in the log me and doesn’t really make sense because you don’t say log me in I feel like someone’s trying to bang on the door I would think about login is probably a better name for their Business it’s more memorable it creates more credibility it’s easier to spell you can advertise it on the radio it is it checks off every single basic box of marketing all the basic box and marketing rules and it’s perfect for any of these you know these three businesses so you know I find it strange that those three haven’t I mean we’ve still got an interest from other parties but those three players haven’t I guess I’m kind of calling them out here today on your on your blog hopefully they’re listening and I’d love to have a fruitful conversation Bill Hartzer kind of recently though lets you know look at Amazon when you know the Amazon originally was books and now Amazon the word Amazon and that brand has nothing to do really with you know what the word is so there are those you know saying what’s our target or for example target I think about you know target practice or something I don’t really necessarily think about so there are those exceptions out there where yeah I mean there are as far as Brandon goes right Jeff What does Amazon and target have in common they’re one words Bill Hartzer yes that’s very yes there’s been a lot of money unfortunately you know branding at this point you know over the years and sure Jeff I mean and then look at ring comm so ring comm is a domain that we sold when I was at unit is tree and they sold the company that that company was sold within two or three years of launch to Amazon’s for over a billion dollars and the owner of that company who was an ex-employee of Amazon I’m not sure if you know this story said they would never have gotten that valuation and they never would have gotten that purchase price without owning the defending they didn’t own ring they would have been they never would have gotten the market share they should have they never would have saw the growth that they were supposed to get and they never would have gotten the purchase price that they got out of Amazon ever know exactly right so I think that it’s imperative for some of these companies I mean they’d Ashley would love to get piece of log means market share and they’re one of the first to the party right I mean same with one password they’d love to get a piece of log Mann’s market share as well they’re late again late to the party so how do you do it you find the best possible brand that people are going to trust and this is a massive a massive leap of faith to any of these companies to give people this kind of information and I think that that is a perfect opportunity for them to prove that that they’re here for a long time they’re not going to get hacked and that we are the leader in our space Bill Hartzer sure give us a little bit you know say I have a domain or are me you know are a couple domain names that I you know bought you know I woke up in the middle of the night and said hey you know that’s a great idea for a company I need to go and see if that domain name is available I go on my phone and it’s available and I purchased it and you know now I’m six months later and you know now it’s I haven’t always started that project I still own this domain now it’s a year or two it’s eleven and a half months later do I renew it or not how do I figure out you know that those domains that I you know bought awhile back how do I figured out you know if I should drop all more what the value is kind of means and how do I how would I set go about selling them okay so I’m gonna take you through kind of a speed version of this sure Jeff so the first thing I would do is I would go to a website like Esteban I put the domain name in there and hit enter I would see what kind of comes up there I would look at different data which would be comparable sales on there, look at those I would take out the ones that are inferior so you might see ones I just don’t absolutely don’t meet the criteria if you want to go into like great detail I have a YouTube channel called saw sells we’re actually gonna there’s actually on there me teaching how to appraise domains but this is the lazy way of doing it is I would see you know what on there kind of catches up to similar quality when I say similar quality if the words make sense phonetically like in a sentence and you’ve heard both in words together before that’s a plus if you haven’t or it’s the wrong tense it doesn’t quite make sense I’d immediately put like a little red X next to that one and then I would I would certainly look there then I would think to myself am I going to do this project if I wake up two years from now you know will I revisit it will I regret selling this and if the answer is no it’s probably time to move on so my suggestion to you would be going to a website like main jet going to GoDaddy put some sort of a low reserve on the domain name and get rid of it now if you multiply this because I know that entrepreneur entrepreneurs like myself and like you bill the gears are always spinning so this isn’t something that happens just once it happens a lot so then all of a sudden you wake up one morning and now you have 200 of these or 300 leaves and now you’re spending two thousand three thousand five thousand ten thousand dollars a year on renewals on ideas that are never gonna happen and you’re carrying these and even if you’ve invested five hundred or a thousand dollars in this name and even if you only knee at 200 bucks in the name Kjetil action take the loss get your money and move on to the next one you’re gonna let them go that’s the best advice I can give you there’s so many people that have come to me that have these big portfolios of thousands of names or carrying them year after year after year there’s no reason to carry half these names and they’re just throwing money in the trash because they spent more than the renewal on at hundreds of dollars and they’re just unwilling to let it go let it go take that money by something else buy a new dream and move on with it you know get you right off on your taxes and take it sometimes you’re gonna make money you say wow that was great Bill Hartzer yeah now there are certainly some exceptions to that and the ones you know I would you know from my experience if you are actively Getting offers or people are actually you know at least let’s say I mean it depends on you know what your definition of actively getting offers but you know if somebody if you’re you know once a week or once or several times a month somebody is sending you an email or contacting you giving you an offer then you probably you probably would keep the name right you can just drop Jeff it’s like a volcano it’s popping out a little a little ash and a little smoke and a little lava and then eventually it’s gonna fill up so what I would certainly do is I’ve put it on the market places get it the exposure put a price on it you know get a good landing page now I’m in there I like ft personally it’s a good little affordable solution you know have the leads dumped into your email you can connect it on to some CRM is out there and then work those leads or give a guy like me the opportunity to work on those opportunities sure and put it up for sale those kinds of names are the best names because you know there’s demand and I would never let those go yeah the depth the stat that I would look at is if you have one even one interested party or two hundreds of parties a year on a name I probably wouldn’t I wouldn’t just put it up for auction I would probably sit on it right if it’s making parking and it’s making close to registration so you’re carrying cost is a buck or maybe nothing if you’re making ten cents a year on it I wouldn’t drop it because there’s people coming to that name that’s showing there’s something out there there’s a pulse right so I keep it but if it’s not making registration it’s not getting inquiries and there’s no action on it what they give the hot potato to somebody else you know take your losses unless you’ve invested it a lot of money in it and let it go right that’s my best advice that I can give you Bill Hartzer yeah or if there’s any chance that you could potentially develop it or actually you know have a writer rights of content and put it out there you know there’s potential for you know for you know rather than just having it’s it just actually you developing into 5 10 20 page sight you know that that potentially you know could get it going again Jeff yeah but again now you’re getting an even deeper and there’s a reason why there’s nothing happening with the day’s first place right that’s why we talking it was it was the plan that never took off right the idea that never happens I had this brilliant idea a long time ago that you can make a party table that was disposable so we’ve come in like a bag that you get at the party store for like ten dollars but then when I figured out what like design and engineering in and getting the everything started with it to make it and then get and then pitch that to like the party store and all these things I mean I went how to pay every penny I had in the bank on a chance and I didn’t even understand the industry Bill Hartzer so you know that was a disposable party table dot-com Jeff But that dream is over like it’s over now so I’d say knowing that even if it had an opportunity now I just have too many other things and selling domain names for myself as a much more sure bet than me investing all this time money resources and energy into this it just doesn’t make any sense yep take it off the chin right Bill Hartzer sure so with that said we’re just about out of time so thanks for joining me today how do we get in touch you met you I know you mentioned your YouTube channel saw sells youtube.com  so I just look up you know the YouTube channel saw sells go directly to saw.com  is that the best way to get in touch Jeff yes I comm go to the contact page you know we do domain acquisitions or react on behalf of buyers we sell super premium names we also manage people’s domain portfolios where we would work on an entire portfolio where they would point their Percy Landers to us and then we would also be taking some of those names to market and selling them and then appraisal services as well Bill Hartzer all right thanks again Jeff this has been the this has been the digital marketing with Bill hearts our pod thanks again Jeff and we’ll see you Online Jeff anytime thank you The post Co-founder Interview for Digital Marketing Podcast with Bill Hartzer appeared first on Saw.com - Blog .
0 notes
sawsells · 5 years ago
Text
Past Congressional Attempts to Combat Online Copyright Infringement
In the past ten years, Congress has tried on multiple occasions to pass legislation to combat online copyright infringement. While the bills received bipartisan support and support from powerful groups such as the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), both attempts failed. The first was the Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act (COICA) in 2010, and the second was the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in 2011. Another bill, the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA) , a rewrite of COICA and similar to the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), also never passed. This article will discuss why these bills failed, what it means for the future, and why it matters to the domain industry and the Internet as a whole. COICA COICA was a controversial bill introduced by Patrick Leahy (D-VT) to combat online copyright infringement. The bill would work by authorizing the Attorney General (AG) to essentially pull the plug on any domain, domestic or foreign, deemed to be “dedicated to infringing activities.” This was a catch-all that included domains in violation of copyright law or that sell or promote counterfeit goods or services. Essentially, under this law, if a website were to be found in violation of copyright law, the AG could require Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to hide that website’s domain name from being accessed. From the onset, several groups opposed the bill. Opponents stated that the bill was in violation of the First Amendment and could harm legitimate websites. They argued that the criteria were too vague and that it was dangerous to allow the government to decide which websites were legitimate and which were “dedicated to infringing activities.” Although the bill had bipartisan support, it died when the 111th session of Congress ended. They basically ran out of time. If this bill were to have passed, search engines such as The Pirate Bay would have been in danger of losing their domain. Additionally, registries owning the rights to domain extensions would have also found themselves in some murky legal waters. SOPA SOPA, introduced in 2011 by Lamar Smith (R-TX), was Congress’ next attempt at combating online infringement. This bill went a step further than COICA. It would have: Barred advertising agencies from conducting business with infringing websites Barred search engines from linking to the websites Required ISPs to block access to the websites Expanded criminal laws to include unauthorized streaming of copyrighted content, with a maximum penalty of five years in prison As with COICA, SOPA proponents said it would protect intellectual property and ease the enforcement of copyright laws. It received widespread bipartisan support, along with support from many organizations, including the Better Business Bureau and the Chamber of Commerce. Opponents of SOPA argued similarly to arguments made in opposition to COICA. They argued that it would be an infringement on free speech and would serve to censor the Internet. For the opponents, they felt it went too far and would put too many websites at risk of the government closing its doors. Opposition grew as an online movement in 2012 when Wikipedia and around 7,000 other websites blacked out their service in protest against the bill. Other protests included an act by the hacker group Anonymous when they blocked access to number pro-SOPA companies including CBS.com. In response to these events, Senate Majority leader Harry Reid (D-NV) postponed the vote. Later, the bill died when the 112th session of Congress ended. Now What? So what does all this mean for the future of free speech on the Internet? One takeaway is that neither of these bills passed, so the status quo remains. On the other hand, each of these attempts had bipartisan support as well as support from powerful companies and organizations such as Major League Baseball, the National Football League, Nike, Nintendo, Viacom, the Recording Industry Association of America, and many more. These attempts to enforce copyright law on the Internet are not going to stop, and they could put legitimate domain owners at risk of losing their lives. We should look to these bills and the arguments made on either side to inform future debates around this issue. We at Saw.com believe it is important that any person that is looking to purchase a domain name or launch any sort of an internet business stays informed. To learn more about what you can do to protect your rights we highly suggest, and support the Internet Commerce Association . The post Past Congressional Attempts to Combat Online Copyright Infringement appeared first on Saw.com - Blog .
0 notes
sawsells · 5 years ago
Link
If you are looking to purchase a domain name please call us for a free consultation. 
0 notes
sawsells · 5 years ago
Text
Saw Video – The Radio Test
Saw.com co-founder Jeff Gabriel explains the “radio test” in a saw.com video. He discusses how the radio test is an essential factor in determining the value of a domain name . Transcript: Hi, my name is Jeff Gabriel, and I’m the CEO and co-founder of SAW.com . Now what ties into the length of the domain name is kind of an easy thing to look at but it’s also kind of an opinion call, but it takes a lot of common sense to look at. The question is, “How memorable is it?” And, “Will it pass this thing called the radio test?”  The question is, “How will it sound on the radio?”  “How will it be perceived by your listener?”  And when we are talking about the radio test, we are also talking about putting it in a video, putting it on a business card, verbally telling somebody the name of your business at a conference. Will they remember it? Will they be able to go back and be able to spell it? Can a family or people who go and purchase your goods and services be able to say it and remember the name of your business and be able to send you the name of that business. And then tying into the length and how universal it is, how easy it is to spell. The name achieve.com would be a wonderful domain name, but will people mix up the e and the i?  How does it sound to somebody who doesn’t speak English as their first language? Are they going to have a hard time spelling it? There are a lot of people who come to me and ask me to appraise domain names or ask me to help them acquire domain names that instead of using the letter s at the end they use the letter z and pronounce it like its plural. What does that do to your business with the radio test, with people making it memorable? It doesn’t help. In order for a domain name to be valuable, it needs to be memorable. It also has to be able to pass something called the radio test. It takes a little bit of common sense, but I’m going to give you an example of something with the radio test that would really make you scratch your head. If you were to purchase the domain name read.com , what do you think about? Do you think about somebody reading a book? Do you think about the action of selling a bookstore? Or what if I told you it’s something that went into a musical instrument and it was spelled reed? What does that do to the value of the domain name? The post Saw Video – The Radio Test appeared first on Saw.com - Blog .
0 notes
sawsells · 5 years ago
Text
Saw.com Co-Founder Article on Forbes Regarding Domain Appraisals
6 Things You Need To Consider When Appraising A Domain Name, by Jeffrey Gabriel An article written by Jeffrey Gabriel was featured as a Forbes Council Post on Forbes.com. The article discusses six things to consider when appraising a domain name . The six considerations are: Extension (Is it a TLD, ccTLD, or generic TLD?) Length (How many characters is the name?) Universal (How universally known is the name?) Spelling (Is the name difficult to spell?) Market trends (Is the name trending? Is the industry trending?) Comparable sales (What are the sales figures for comparable names?) To inquire about Saw.com’s expert Appraisal Service, contact a Saw.com professional today . The post Saw.com Co-Founder Article on Forbes Regarding Domain Appraisals appeared first on Saw.com - Blog .
0 notes
sawsells · 5 years ago
Text
Ballet.com For Sale with Saw.com
We are proud to announce that we are currently the exclusive Brokers representing the sale of the domain name, Ballet.com. For the first time ever this domain has been listed for sale. In just the short period of time Saw.com has been representing this premium domain we have received a considerable amount of interest not only from the most obvious possible suitors but in many different industries one may never expect! This opportunity has had so much interest our release has been featured on YahooFinance.com , MarketWatch.com and hundreds of other sites! For more information, call Amanda Waltz @ 1-781-281-9475 x702 or [email protected] or visit: https://sell.sawbrokers.com/domain/ballet.com/  to make an inquiry. If you are interested in us representing your super premium domain name or help managing your portfolio please contact us .   The post Ballet.com For Sale with Saw.com appeared first on Saw.com - Blog .
0 notes
sawsells · 5 years ago
Text
For the first time in 18 years, Login.com, is for sale!
Attention – Login.com is for sale for the first time in 18 years, exclusively through Saw.com Projections show that the Identity and Access Management (IAM) industry, an already booming industry, will grow by over 13% by the end of 2026. As more and more people work remotely, the industry will continue to grow. Login.com is truly an industry-defining name, and there is no better time to buy this domain. Login.com, a short, simple to spell, and recognizable premium domain name will not stay on the market long. Business leaders understand that premium domains boost credibility and establish companies at the top of their industries. Login.com will provide invaluable brand protection in addition to growing as an asset as the IAM industry grows. Let our Domain Name Brokers walk you through all aspects of how to buy a domain name . We give you all the support and guidance you need to buy the perfect domain for your business. Here is the press release featured on Business Insider: https://markets.businessinsider.com/news/stocks/for-the-first-time-in-18-years-login-com-is-for-sale-1029237391 For more information, call Robert Wilson at 1-781-281-9475 x703, email at [email protected] , or visit: https://sell.sawbrokers.com/domain/login.com/ to make an inquiry. If you are interested in us representing your super premium domain name or help manage your portfolio please contact us. The post For the first time in 18 years, Login.com, is for sale! appeared first on Saw.com - Blog .
1 note · View note