Membership is FREE, giving all registered users unlimited access to every Acorn Domains feature, resource, and tool! Optional membership upgrades unlock exclusive benefits like profile signatures with links, banner placements, appearances in the weekly newsletter, and much more - customized to your membership level!

Domainer Definition

Status
Not open for further replies.
I am not a domainer even though:

I bought my first investment-only domain in '98 (not super early but still well before most people realised they would become valuable).

I have bought and sold domains in the £x,xxx range - I'd say you need to make a living from it to be a true domainer (it's a sideline or a hobby otherwise).

I have 700+ domains - the number of domains you own does not make you a domainer. I am closer to a domain addict than a domainer.
 
I am not a domainer even though:

I bought my first investment-only domain in '98 (not super early but still well before most people realised they would become valuable).

I have bought and sold domains in the £x,xxx range - I'd say you need to make a living from it to be a true domainer (it's a sideline or a hobby otherwise).

I have 700+ domains - the number of domains you own does not make you a domainer. I am closer to a domain addict than a domainer.

I'd consider a domainer to be someone that has quality and quantity in their portfolio that allows them to have a near full time income from it .... which all rules me out! Otherwise, as inbound says, "it's a sideline or hobby", or maybe even a bit of a gamble?
 
Anyone who has a substantial amount of domains names which are intended to be sold.

I wouldn't class a domainer as a status which has to be achieved after making x amount, as that's like saying your not a chef unless you make x amount of meals.

Someone who makes a full time living would be a successful domainer and someone who sells none, makes no money would be a failed domainer.
 
Anyone who has a substantial amount of domains names which are intended to be sold.

I wouldn't class a domainer as a status which has to be achieved after making x amount, as that's like saying your not a chef unless you make x amount of meals.

Someone who makes a full time living would be a successful domainer and someone who sells none, makes no money would be a failed domainer.

Portfolio quality certainly needs to enter the picture at some point. Quantity is not enough, because anyone with more money than sense can fill their boots with worthless domains.

If somebody has 1,000 "no hoper" domains (as viewed by a knowledgeable independent observer with a good understanding of the domain name market, and what is likely to sell) they surely can't really be considered a "domainer", any more than somebody clumsily mixing random ingredients before foisting their nauseating creations on reluctant friends and family can be considered a "chef". A minimum level of skill is required in both instances, even on a purely amateur basis.
 
Last edited:
Simples - if your main source of income derives from selling domains, or from passive domain monetization...then you're a domainer. Quality and quantity have nothing to do with it. You can still be a domainer even if you don't own any domains.

No other definition counts.

End of discussion.

Thank you, and good night!






BTW, to answer the initial question - quite a few!
 
Yes your right there's a difference between a professional chef and the chef at the roadside cafe!

I think professional domainer and amateur domainer is the equivalent with amateurs not requiring much skill.
 
Yes your right there's a difference between a professional chef and the chef at the roadside cafe!

I think professional domainer and amateur domainer is the equivalent with amateurs not requiring much skill.

As some of the recent appraisal threads have shown, it's possible to be a much worse domainer than it is a chef - if only because, if their tastebuds are still working at all, a chef can at least diagnose the worst failings of their own cooking, whereas it seems some "domainers" are completely and utterly oblivious to the viability of what they're registering.
 
Yes good point. The person who cooks at home isn't a chef. The guy who buys a couple of names as someone mentioned he should at the pub is the same, someone who had domains...
 
Good Answers Edwin.

A short-time ago I mentioned about writing down what helped make a good "brandable domain" (one of those flippant remarks that I hadn't really given much analytical thought to at the time)

Then as I started to put some thought down on paper - I realised, I can't summarise years of sales and merchandising knowledge in a simple point-to-point page. Let alone include all Academic and case study work from 6 years in further education.

I like the Chef analogy, just because that was my original vocation (City and guilds 706.1/2 for anyone that done the same) until I decided working while everyone was having a F***ing good-time wasn't part of my working agenda

A domainer like a chef knows his game - sure occasionally he gets burnt (and I still got the scars) but, it's years of knowledge at work. not just the application of Will-power
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

The Rule #1

Do not insult any other member. Be polite and do business. Thank you!

Members online

Premium Members

New Threads

Domain Forum Friends

Our Mods' Businesses

*the exceptional businesses of our esteemed moderators
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
      There are no messages in the current room.
      Top Bottom