DomainManage
Acorn Supporter
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2016
- Posts
- 455
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Offer received: high ££££ GBP
I have emailed the 'prospectives' with a counter
If genuine, which I hope they are, all the best with securing a sale. I'd certainly be interested to know if a sale is secured through DM's platform.Hi Ian
You watching my tag
I have not had much joy on the 'few' domains I now have for a while. Both these seem to be genuine offers actually and I have emailed the 'prospectives' with a counter - but not heard back on either.
I canned my huge portfolio of 'reasonable' domains thanks to Noms greed - but strangley, used to get a lot more offers for the lower hanging fruit... guess that's the way it goes.
Feel free to make me an offer on those two if you're interested
Cheers
TW
Wow, I'd have bitten their hand off.
Wasn't a high £xxxx ! In fact was the minimum possible £xxxx on that one!
High ££££ offer on this domain? Similar high ££££ offer on another domain yesterday owned by the same company. Are these genuine offers? Call me cynical, but ...![]()
Ah right, that obviously changes things quite significantly. A bug report then if it is claiming hugely inflated prices over what was actually received.
Not jumping to conclusions, but for me personally, "Offer received: high ££££ GBP" means £7,500-£9,999 offer, which isn't the case here. Perhaps if others felt that is how they interpreted it, then it may need a reword?If you consider the average flow of sales based on popular auction platforms for (.UK domains), not many .uk/.co.uk names make it beyond £750, I would say 1k would be good sale. In fact looking around forums quickly most of it seems sub £500 apart from LLL's etc.
Before people jump to conclusions there was no attempt to inflate offers. '££££' offer in this context is classed as a 'high' offer.
The offer feed ££££ description could be misconstrued as being 1k vs 5k so we will look at that.
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