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Free.co.uk SOLD $205,000 by DomainBooth.com

Discussion in 'Domain Industry News' started by Jag Singh, Mar 12, 2020.

  1. twostepsbehind United States

    twostepsbehind Active Member

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    I just can’t fathom why the buyer didn’t get the .uk included in the deal at a price like that

    The can be updated easily and cheaply, but someone else launching something similar on free.uk can’t be changed without even more cash
     
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  2. Rossy Netherlands

    Rossy Member

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    Long term investment.
    For now .co.uk is mainstream, but this will probably change during the years (10+?) as .uk would be more common.
     
  3. dee

    dee Well-Known Member

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    Of course you can't. You also can't say it won't be true, so it's a calculated risk. If I can get hold of domains now for 100 quid that are potentially worth thousands in a few years when the only additional cost is say £5 quid a year average for renewals, then it's a decent risk. You can also develop them if decent, so no brainer I would have thought.

    Long term...as we know... shorter is also generally better.

    Out of interest @Trauiner , do you hold any uk's at all ?
     
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  4. Rossy Netherlands

    Rossy Member

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    The base is there, it's available, companies are currently starting to use it.
    And it's widely known that domain values go up as domains get shorter.

    And of course they are cheap, the demand is low at this moment. This definitely will not mean it doesn't change during the years (bitcoin, anyone?) and will be more generic like almost every other existing ccTld.
    So it's make a lot of sense to invest in .uk right now, cheap and quite plausible it will change in the future.
     
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  5. dee

    dee Well-Known Member

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    Have you never bought a lottery ticket ? :)

    Possibly, but given what gone on in the last year, I suspect it's not normal. I doubt there are many business spending big on domains. There could also very easliy be a tipping point. Lets say Google, then BBC switch to the UK. Not saying they will, but could happen. That could change the perception of joe public pretty quickly. I think it's slowly creeping in anyway. I see uks more and more on vans, flyers etc
     
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  6. Chris Holland

    Chris Holland Active Member

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    Because the buyer most likely didn't even ask for it. I'm fairly certain that the savvy seller of free.co.uk would have been willing to throw in the .UK if the buyer had said "£200K or so for the pair, take it or leave it". If a buyer doesn't ask though, there aren't many that would take the time to apprise them of the situation and then offer them a domain that they didn't even know about five minutes before and at no additional charge.

    In his book The Art of the Deal, the now rather unpopular Donald Trump narrated how he received an unprecedented 40-year tax break from NYC to build his first hotel there. An incredible deal that has so far made him over $450 million and still makes him money to this day. A fellow major property magnate at the time asked him "how on earth did you persuade the city to go for a 40 year deal". Trump replied “because I didn't ask for 50".

    Despite Nominet's previous proposals that were cited as the justification for launching
    .UK. i.e. that it would be positioned as a premium brand with a raft of value added features including enhanced security features, secure DNS and premium marketing etc, it was yet another ruse to enable Nominet's robber barons to trouser additional millions to augment the millions of pounds that they've already squeezed out of their, and make no mistake folks - it is indeed "their" de facto if not de jure, extremely profitable not for profit cash cow. Snouts to the trough lads! And ladette, not forgetting Eleanor of course. Oink!

    upload_2021-1-13_18-16-27.png
     
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    Last edited: Jan 14, 2021
  7. twostepsbehind United States

    twostepsbehind Active Member

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    Fully agree with this, it's almost a certainty the seller would've sold both for the same price if that was the final offer - you don't ask you don't get...

    It does, however, mean someone could buy free.uk and takeover this chap's entire brand - and to some (including me free.uk just feels better than free.co.uk)

    If someone is going to throw this much money into a domain, they have to secure the brand at the same time...
     
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  8. Chris Holland

    Chris Holland Active Member

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    I couldn't agree more.
    How ironic that they could have had FREE.UK for FREE!

    Their expensive mistake will cost them an absolute minimum of £100K at some time in the near future, and that's only if Anthony is in an extremely generous mood on the day. If they wait more than a year, and of course by that time they'll be far more vested in the brand than they are now, they'll doubtless have to pay more for the .UK than they did for the .co.uk. Especially as AAA is by a huge margin by far the most bullish on .UK of any of the major players. For all the buyer's boasts about being "net savvy", they have demonstrated that, for now, they are spectacularly NOT net savvy. I'd imagine that will soon change but what an expensive lesson it will have been for them.
     
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  9. DJ

    DJ Well-Known Member

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    Sadly it looks like this project didn't work out too well for the buyer.
     
  10. JMI

    JMI Active Member

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    What makes you say that?

    And why isn't it worth 400k minimum now.. think about it..
     
  11. DJ

    DJ Well-Known Member

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    The original idea for the site was a free property listing site similar to strike.co.uk.

    That seems to have been abandoned and it is now simply offering mortgages. I can't see how this utilises the name free.co.uk? 9 out of 10 mortgage brokers are free, as they make their money from the lender for the referral.

    The name could be worth £400k, but it wouldn't be due to the current site or concept.
     
  12. m4c Germany

    m4c Active Member

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    only just seen this thread while browsing the archives - looks like the mortgage idea didn’t work out.

    Great to read all the opinions on what it could be or should be worth :)
    - and from a pure ROI perspective, without accounting for any development costs, it’s only got to net £50 a day to be making a 10% yield.

    Should be able to do that with a directory of free trial offers from credible suppliers, who would pay for the leads…

    i’ve given them my email address so made them a £1 to sell on to spammers, while I wait and see what ‘freebie’ they drop for me on Monday :D
     
  13. JMoore United Kingdom

    JMoore New Member

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    I like the way you think. I guest there isn't many uses for it otherwise.