startups are obsessed with good domains, they’re the entry point to your brand.
when my company negotiated the purchase of Fomo.com a few weeks ago, we had to ask ourselves critical questions about whether the expense made sense for us.
here are some thoughts on negotiating a premium domain name.
why?
if your business just launched, or you haven’t raised significant capital ($1mm+), i don’t recommend spending more than $10,000 on a domain.
frankly, nobody cares about you or your business on Day 1. spend $15 on an available URL and focus on your customers.
but if sales are growing, you’ve got money in the bank, and your current domain (in our case, “usefomo.com”) is really bugging you, consider upgrading.
how?
a lot of domain negotiation advice is premised on a lie.
maybe these tips sound familiar:
- “email your preferred domain’s owner from a fake Hotmail address”
- “have a friend reach out so the seller can’t infer your assets”
- “make exploding offers to create urgency”
in buying Fomo.com, we didn’t do any of this.
types of domain owners
before diving into specific advice for buying a premium domain, let’s put all our seller personas on the table. domains are owned by 3 types of folks:
- squatters
- holdouts
- has-beens
squatters
this is the worst persona from which to purchase a domain name. many of today’s premium, unused websites are still owned by people who bought them in the 90’s, thinking “one day i’ll be rich!”
these menaces have simultaneously zero talent and unlimited leverage, a dangerous position. insurance.com, for example, cost just $15 per year to maintain yet sold for $35.6 million.
the challenge with domain squatters is they’re obsessed about valuations, so no number is “enough,” and it’s nearly impossible to convince them *you* are the offer they’ve been waiting for.
holdouts
slightly less obnoxious than squatters, a holdout is someone (or some entity) who intends to use a domain, but doesn’t have a specific project for it at the moment.
they’re less likely to play games with buyers (like a squatter) but also less interested in offers at all.
if they do open negotiations, sometimes holdouts will ask that you pay extra for their current “pre-work” or let them retain a % of the domain post-transfer, to keep their dream alive.
has-beens
potentially the best seller persona to encounter on your domain buying journey, has-beens are folks who previously used the domain, but have since shut down the product, rebranded, been acquired, etc.
they own the domain because, “why not,” but have no specific future use case (holdouts) and did not buy it with the intention of flipping it (squatters).
brokers
similar to the dishonesty tips (faking your identity), there’s a lot of advice on how to deal with brokers.
i won’t try to wax poetic here, because we did not buy Fomo through a broker, and when i have dealt with brokers the purchase price was never above $2,500, and one time as low as $800.
what i will say is that brokers are supposed to represent their client’s best interests.
and unlike the seller-owner, who may get satisfaction from not selling a domain, brokers only get paid when a transaction takes place. this is probably how i wore down 1 broker from $20,000 to $800, for socialproof.org.
for these reasons i contend brokers are actually more helpful, vs less, because their additional influence over the buyer encourages the same behavior you’re trying to elicit. two is better than 1.
a new approach to domain buying
regardless of the seller persona you’re working with, i believe the following tips yield better results than emailing Whois records from your ex-girlfriend’s Hotmail.
- demonstrate you’re the most viable buyer
- be open about what you can afford
- remind them you’ll be ok if sale doesn’t happen
most viable buyer
there are four ways to do this: IP, IP, IP, and IP.
our company owns a couple dozen pieces of intellectual property, from trademarks to copyrights, for “Fomo” the word as well as logos, phrases, and in multiple nations /each.
we spent 2.5 years accumulating this arsenal by investing in legal teams who helped us file and protest outdated or irrelevant conflicts.
if a seller thinks “someone big will come along and pay more than you,” but you have the IP to prove you’re the biggest or most serious player out there, this helps them absolve fear of the unknown.
be open
if your first offer is a “final offer,” that’s plain bad negotiating. instead, your first offer should achieve 1 thing: a counter.
the worst spot to find yourself in with a seller is a non-response, or flat “no.” so, make a serious offer and follow up in a week or two. but don’t say “we can pay more” in your followup; hold firm until the seller asks for it.
if their counter is far outside your price range, counter the counter with your absolute highest bid. let them know (be truthful) this is all you can afford, and you won’t have more in the future.
i don’t recommend making this an exploding offer, by the way, because if you say “decide in 48 hours,” and they tentatively agree 3 weeks later, you’ve just lost face, and the negotiation has been reset.
how to articulate your ability to pay: if you’re bootstrapped, or only have X months runway, or your investors / team / wife won’t let you… just say so, and be genuine.
this, combined with the IP / viability strategy above, is a great dose of reality for many sellers.
you’ll be ok either way
this is only believable if you have a visible, successful company already living on a less preferable domain.
in our case,
- Fomo was already doing $1.5mm /year in sales on usefomo.com,
- we ranked Page 1 on Google for “fomo,” and
- we already owned the
fomo
handle on several app stores, ie Shopify.
letting the seller know their domain is not mission critical is also dubbed being able to walk away from the table.
while this advice is not restricted to domain purchases, showing you’re surviving + thriving on another URL is a sobering message for the seller.
if things go wrong
when you’re doing OK on another domain, prospects can find your business, and the seller has considered your absolute best offer, even a non-sale is better than where you started.
this is because there’s a very small chance anyone would be willing to pay more than you.
not to mention, the seller is almost certain to re-engage you if they receive another bid, because you’ve demonstrated your sincere interest and it’s in their best interests to start a bidding war.
locking your “spot in line” is progress.
deal structure
when you do agree on a price with the seller, it’s time to write a contract. congrats!
(i’m happy to share the one i used last month; subscribe to this blog at the bottom and email me for the document.)
there are a few ways you can structure a domain sale:
- all cash up front
- cash over time
- lease to own
all cash vs cash over time are intuitive deal structures, so i won’t get into those.
what is an interesting option, however, is domain leasing.
this can work a couple different ways…
- seller simply forwards all traffic from their domain, to yours
- seller allows you to manage DNS but retains ownership
forwarding traffic might be more trouble than it’s worth, unless the seller is a has-been and Google still considers their website an authoritative source for your keywords.
managing DNS, #2, is where it gets interesting.
suppose i own yourname.com and i want $5,000 for it. you only have $1,000 cash, but you’re willing to pay $5,000 if you can pay it off in 24 months.
as a seller, it’s too risky for me to give you ownership of a domain and wait 2 years for an amount that’s 5x your current cash reserve. what i can do, then, is point yourname.com’s nameservers to a DNS manager of your choosing, letting you fully control the domain, SSL certificates, etc.
if you do miss a payment or 3 i can revoke the custom nameservers and take back my domain. likewise, when you finish paying i can provide a login to the registrar, and we’re done.
i’d like to see more startups buy premium domains with this strategy: cash strapped companies can build brands, and sellers OK w/ long term payouts stay protected.
putting it all together
it’s a funny concept to consider that domains last forever.
as in, if i wrote in my will or paid some lawyers, i could probably prevent anyone from having Fomo.com (save gov’t interference) for 1,000s of years.
it’s this epic thought, difficult to fully wrap my head around, that ultimately compelled us to spend a lot of money on a 4 letter domain.
URLs are a form of legacy, just like your accomplishments or your family lineage. it makes sense that all the good ones are taken, but that doesn’t mean they’re not transferrable.
i’d love to hear in the comments or on twitter how other folks think about buying domains, or if there are additional tips i should recommend in this post.
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