- Joined
- Nov 14, 2011
- Posts
- 443
- Reaction score
- 5
Hi,
I'm curious as I've never been in this position for.
It's easy to spend your time building a site, invest a lot of money and then say it's "worth" £xx,xxx or whatever.
But how easy is it actually selling the types of sites that go for 5 or 6 figures?
I just wonder because someone on this forum might have a site easily worth £50k but when it comes to selling it they won't be able to find the right buyer with those sorts of pockets. Thus, the website is actually only "worth" £20k in terms of being able to offload it in reasonable time.
Therefore my question is split into two parts:
1) How do you measure a site's worth? Should it be valued on how much the seller is willing to sell for or what a buyer in a reasonable time period is willing to pay?
2) How easy is it going out there and selling websites for 5 or 6 figures? Do you need to hire an agency or business broker?
Especially when it comes to premium domains, it seems like a lot of people are holding on long term until they find the "right" buyer and end-user.
I'm curious as I've never been in this position for.
It's easy to spend your time building a site, invest a lot of money and then say it's "worth" £xx,xxx or whatever.
But how easy is it actually selling the types of sites that go for 5 or 6 figures?
I just wonder because someone on this forum might have a site easily worth £50k but when it comes to selling it they won't be able to find the right buyer with those sorts of pockets. Thus, the website is actually only "worth" £20k in terms of being able to offload it in reasonable time.
Therefore my question is split into two parts:
1) How do you measure a site's worth? Should it be valued on how much the seller is willing to sell for or what a buyer in a reasonable time period is willing to pay?
2) How easy is it going out there and selling websites for 5 or 6 figures? Do you need to hire an agency or business broker?
Especially when it comes to premium domains, it seems like a lot of people are holding on long term until they find the "right" buyer and end-user.