07.21
I’ve recently posted information regarding backorder domains. The domain I have in auction currently was released from a registrar who had a relationship with Snapnames, however the domain was picked up by Pool.com; this points to the assumption that even if a relationship exist with a registrar, it does not necissarily mean the preferred vendor will get the name. I would like to emphasize that if backordering deleted domains is a strategy, you must submit to a handful of companies (i.e. enom.com, pool.com, snapnames.com) as long as there service is free until the domain is purchased. A paid backorder attempt, such as Godaddy.com, has proven to be insufficient at times. You lose the fee even if the company loses the backorder attempt. The domain game is fun, but be ready to play hard. There is no room for back seat drivers.
Update: The domain I WAS bidding on is hearings.com. After careful consideration and until the U.S. patent office search is back online, I’ll refrain from bidding more for this domain. I don’t see any value for this other than the existing traffic and backlinks associated with it, which are MANY. The top bid as of now is $875.00 with 15 bids placed!
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