Archive for the ‘3 Letter Guide’ Category

Last 3 Letter Domain Sales

July 13, 2008 | 3 Letter Guide | RSS 2.0

Has the domain niche that everyone thought was untouchable finally hit its peak? Over the past few weeks we have started to see a steady decline in the bottom end prices of LLL.com domains.

This is pretty far from the truth considering the recent sales data taken from multiple venues. Here are some recent LLL.com sales:

2008-06-20 - RYY.com - $7,124
2008-06-23 - XKD.com - $7,100
2008-06-26 - HMQ.com - $7,300
2008-06-26 - BIY.com - $7,400
2008-07-01 - QVK.com - $6,730
2008-07-02 - FQV.com - $6,305

You could argue that some of these aren’t of the highest quality but this is incidental considering the minimum wholesale figure doesn’t discriminate and covers all LLL.com domains.

Will this recent decrease in LLL.com domain value incite panic selling. There seems to have been an increase in LLL.com domains on the market recently and this will only decrease their value further. Greater supply is soon followed by decreased demand. Some domain investors think that this is the beginning of a LLL.com price crash and believe prices could fall below $4000 in the coming months. Has the mighty giant, the ’safest’ investment, the domain niche offering ultimate liquidity, finally hit it’s peak?

How this will affect four letter domain sales I do not know but just recently we have seen a marginal increase in LLLL.com sales figures. I believe this is because the peoples gaze has turned to the three letter domain market. Confidence is once again beginning to grow in quad letter domains because the initial scare of falling prices has passed and people have once again begun to reinvestin this niche. Who knows if this will continue as three letter domain sales inevitably affect their four letter domain offspring. They are intertwinedbut many domainers believe the huge gap between the two markets must close sooner or later. What they didn’t believe is that its LLL.com prices decreasing that is closing the gap rather than LLLL.com prices dramatically increasing.

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3 Letter Domains - What is the Importance of Letter Quality?

June 17, 2008 | 3 Letter Guide | RSS 2.0

It is probably fair enough to say that letter quality truly resides in the eye of the beholder, and as such, each opinion is valuable.

This said, in declaring what letters are of better or lesser quality, several important factors should be considered, and even then there is not universal agreement. Some of these factors include:

Letter commonality within acronymns
Language
End User potential
Memorability/Branding
Common Usage

Here on 3character.com, I think it is fair to state that by general concensus the premium letters are: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, L, M, N, O, P, R, S, T. Not every single person agrees with this placement, but very few would argue that these letters are not of premium quality given their commonality in many major languages, commonality in business acronym usage and their increased commonality in end-user sales among LLL domains.

It can get a little grayer on the lesser high quality and lower quality letters. For example, within the english language, Q, X, Y, and Z are much less frequently found and used as the first letter of many words or names. To this end, here is a helpful chart that shows the commonality of letter usage in the english language. This said, commonality of usage and commonality of use as the first letter of a word or name are different concerns to consider. E is by far the most used letter in composing english words, and C and T are used somewhat less in word composition, but yet are very common as the first letter of a name or word. Likewise, X is very rarely used in the composition of english words, but even more rarely is it used as the first letter of an english word or name (and acronym domains are based on words and names).

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So far our focus has been on letter quality in the english language, but as we all recognize, acronym domains are valuable in many other languages as well, and this can place a cloud on what otherwise seems a simple science. For example, Z is not a widely used first letter for words or names in the english language, but is very common in the german language. Someone from Germany might have a very different opinion than someone from the US as to how valuable Z might be as a letter in an acronym or LLL domain.

In the consideration of premium, lesser high quality and lower quality letters, the only real way to guage their placement in these categories is to seek general concensus understandings, which should consider end-user sales by letter type and end-user desire and use for each letter. Though opinions vary on this, it is most generally found that the letters fall in these categories:

A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, L, M, N, O, P, R, S, T are considered premium letters.

Lesser high quality letters include: J, K, U, V, W.

Lower quality letters include: Q, X, Y, Z.

It’s fair to differ with this general concensus, but it is also helpful to try to place these letters in fair general categories based on the factors above, as well as to consider one of the most important factors of all…end-user sales data (one of the greatest strengths of LLL domains for wholesale valuation purposes).

If you or I have a difference of opinion with these categorizations, it’s really alright that we can all agree to disagree. End user sales and end-user usage really win the day and by far trump our own opinions.

So here we are again…perhaps it is all in the eye of the beholder…and most would agree that so far even the beholder of the worst LLL combination in a top extension can’t complain too much.

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