NBC Universal and Harry & David among companies that bought domain names via DomainNameSales.com last month.
DomainNameSales.com sent out a monthly sales list for September yesterday. This marks the first time DNW is putting together an end user sales list for DomainNameSales.com. Some of the bigger sales, including DataCenters.com at $190,000, have unknown buyers.
NBC Universal bought DumbandDumber.com for $15,000.
Bloomsbury Publishing plc, the book publisher that published the Harry Potter series, bought MusicExpress.co.uk for $3,500. It sells music books through an imprint.
Promodeals B.V. in the Netherlands bought DailyDeals.co.uk for a whopping $55,000.
Harry & David, seller of fruit gift baskets, bought BusinessGifts.com for $28,000.
Regsafe LLC, a compliance company, bought REGSafe.com for $3,000.
XercisePro, a scheduling system for the fitness industry, bought TrainerPro.com for $7,000.
Van Products, which sells van modifications for people with disabilities, bought usedHandicapVans.com for $8,000.
Residential property management company Rance Real Estate bought TenantWorld.com for $9,000.
Conservative news site NewsMax bought RetirementLetter.com for $8,000.
The company behind dating/marriage site Dream-Marriage.com bought DatingBeat.com for $7,000.
BathPros, Inc. in Bolingbrook, Illionois bought BathPros.com for $7,600.
ET Telecom Ltd in Great Britain bought AirTime.net for $4,500.
Texas flooring company Solar Contract Carpet bought ApartmentCarpets.com for $675.
Engineering Innovation Inc, which uses the unfortunate domain name EII-online.com, bought EII.net for $7,500.
Photo licensor Arcangel Images also made a nice upgrade, from Arcangel-Images.com to Arcangel.com for $2,000.
Online pet goods site WholesalePet.com bought the plural version WholesalePets.com for $15,000.
Apparel manufacturer Wilson Imports Ltd bought WilsonImports.com for $600. It uses the .net version of this domain.
Wireless internet company WiFi Mundo bought Wifi.vc for $500.
Money lender Evolution Money bought HelloLoans.com for $5,250.
Poosty, a secure email provider with a rather bad name, bought SecureMailbox.com for $6,000.
Luxury Motor Group in NYC bought LuxuryMotorGroup.com for $350.
Residential real estate firm AH Capital, which uses the domain AH-Cap.com, bought AHCapital.com for $3,000.
Advanced Microcomputing Concepts, which uses the domain AMCSolutions.net, bought the matching .com AMCSolutions.com for $1,500.
Get Taxi bought Gett.com for $25,000. I wrote about this deal earlier as it appears to have been sold through GoDaddy.
Web development firm Common Media bought CommonMedia.com for $5,000. It has been using CommonMediaInc.com.
Marketing company The Townsend Team bought TownsendTeam.com for $2,500.
American Bullion paid $250 for GoldIRARollover.com.
Financial Accounting Foundation bought FinancialAccounting.org for $4,500.
Fatter averages than what you usually post.Luxury Motor Group buyer got off easy however.
I never read these posts because I found them confuse and very time consuming.
For these lists be readable more easily and quickly (everyone has limited time), you should put in bold the domain … price and below in normal font your comment about eventually the buyer. This way one could quickly locate the ones he is curious and ignore the rest.
My friendly suggestion.
If you can improve it thsi way I am sure many will appreciate.
Hmmm…I always assumed people were mostly interested in seeing the name of the company (looking for big companies and such) and then the domain. Does anyone else have thoughts on this?
Most of the buyers are unknown (at least by me), now most of your readers are domainers and are curious about the names sold.
I think it’s fine as is. Especially the occasional tidbit about what larger companies buy.
I mostly skip these end-user lists too, for the same reason as cybertonic. I’d find a table more concise and easier to read (domain, price, buyer, note). I read through this post only because it was about DNS.
I’ll play around with it.
There is nothing confusing about your posts.
It is time well spent.
As a matter of fact, your posts are more valuable than most.
DNW and your end user sale list is one of the blogs that makes Domaining (com) what it is. Let’s not forget.
Thanks
Curious about the relationship between domaining.com and my personal opinion on the way these specific sales posts are presented?
And if you read well, I am only talking about these sale list posts, not all posts.
I fired an improvement suggestion based on my experience and logic.