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Woop

Discussion in 'Domain Appraisals' started by Systreg, Jun 30, 2014.

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  1. Systreg

    Systreg Well-Known Member

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    I had this caught for me, nice short brandable for whatever, thoughts on value?

    I notice it was listed as selling for £3K in Sep 2011 here on Domain Journal

    There are 4 TM's for this term, but that's not a problem as it could be used for a wide range of things that don't infringe on those.
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2014
  2. Domain Forum

    Acorn Domains Elite Member

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    IWA Meetup
     
  3. DaveP United Kingdom

    DaveP Well-Known Member

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    I really like this one, surely end user would be around low £x,xxx. Good luck matey!
     
  4. AssetDomains

    AssetDomains Well-Known Member

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    Was after this myself I agree low xxxx on a good day
     
  5. Murray

    Murray Well-Known Member

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    I think whoop with the h is the more used one

    But I still like it, short and perky, would go with what Dave & Asset said in terms of x,xxx
     
  6. Systreg

    Systreg Well-Known Member

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    Thanks for your thoughts, I was thinking anywhere from lowest x,xxx to mid x,xxx, as you never can be sure with brandables, the previous owner had a £5K bin price listed on Sedo, I've put a £3.5K price on it now and left it open to offers, comes with the .uk also that was caught at the same time.

    On the day of the catch, the catcher passed an email enquiry on to me, which was asking the catcher if it was for sale, he told them it was for a client, they then emailed me and offered £500 for it, I left it there.
     
  7. julian United Kingdom

    julian Banned

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    Surely the spelling is Whoop - maybe you could try and offer it to the owner?
     
  8. Systreg

    Systreg Well-Known Member

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    Julian, the spelling doesn't mean anything, it's a brandable word, woop isn't pretending to be whoop, there are variations, both appear to have the same and different meanings, search either word in Twitter for example, both are used a lot, same exacts for each as well.
     
  9. julian United Kingdom

    julian Banned

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    I was only going by the Oxford dictionary definitions

    http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/Woop-Woop?q=woop

    http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/whoop?q=whoop

    As a potentially brandable word, I was just thinking a name that meant a humorous name for a remote outback town or district might be difficult to brand - also people might get confused when heard out loud with the other spelling too - the old radio test thingy..

    Not saying it won't sell or is a not any good btw.
     
  10. Systreg

    Systreg Well-Known Member

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    You analyse things too deeply, Julian, and I'm sure any of those who already brand on this word aren't concerned that they might be mistaken for some place outback in Australia :), nor all the people online writing woop to show happiness at something when they write it.
     
  11. deluxedomains

    deluxedomains Well-Known Member

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    nice name good luck with it.hope you get a good price :)
     
  12. julian United Kingdom

    julian Banned

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    Everyone says that, it's been a recurring problem my whole life. I wish I could just take things for what they were more :-?

    I envy the way you guys just see a domain, smash it out there and get sales.
     
  13. Retired_Member38

    Retired_Member38 Banned

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    imo the spelling is very important (for this domain and every other one). If say to someone on the phone 'visit whoop dot com' where are they likely to end up.

    btw my macbook just auto corrected Woop to Whoop...
     
  14. Systreg

    Systreg Well-Known Member

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    I looked at the wh**p.co.uk Who-Is earlier, and it didn't click at the time that you own that one :lol:

    To a point, I do see the points made about spelling and/or the radio test, but I think the radio test is old hat these days, most things these days are written online, in emails, texts, on tv and other written media, on advertising hoardings, buses and vans etc, so to me it's not that important these days, and Google doesn't do the auto correct thing asking "did you mean" when typing woop, and any loss of traffic is going to be minimal because of radio, and that's even if it was advertised on radio.
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2014
  15. Retired_Member38

    Retired_Member38 Banned

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    Okay so change 'radio test' to 'conversation in a coffee' shop test then :lol:

    If its hard for people to spell you're fighting an up hill battle before you even launch.
     
  16. Systreg

    Systreg Well-Known Member

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    Ok, I'm sitting in a coffee shop, and my mate says, have a look at this site about whatever product, it's called w**p.co.uk, so I go to w**p.co.uk, job done :)

    Alternatively, my mate says, have a look at this site, it's called w**p.co.uk, alright, how do you spell that, with or without a H, without a H he says, end result is I go to w**p.co.uk :)

    If people want to find a site, they'll find it, the negligible amount of people who may hear it as a spoken word isn't worth bothering about, and if it's a word with a couple of possible spellings, the person being told the name by their mate on the phone or in person will tell them how it's spelt, but at the end of the day, most people would see the name written as an url somewhere.
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2014
  17. PanzerWagon Norway

    PanzerWagon Active Member

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    It's spelt Whoop.

    Big issue with spelling and that surely effects value.

    Monkey is right - if you tell people you bought XYZ from wuːp .co.uk they're going to end up at whoop.co.uk. And you had a very bad day.

    The only merit I can see of it vs whoop.co.uk is that you're not fighting against a Google definition box and various other dictionary sites to start ranking. Although I'm not sure at what point the define box disappears, maybe the minute someone buys some adwords on it.
     
  18. DaveP United Kingdom

    DaveP Well-Known Member

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    Flickr, flattr, pittr pattr,
    Zuora, Quora
    brandable names
    of which a plethora
     
  19. seemly

    seemly Well-Known Member

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    Last edited: Jul 1, 2014
  20. PanzerWagon Norway

    PanzerWagon Active Member

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    They are poor examples to say the least.

    Sell it to collingwood insurance, they run woopcover .com.
     
  21. DaveP United Kingdom

    DaveP Well-Known Member

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    Why? Once upon a time all were unheard of...
     
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