Archive

Posts Tagged ‘afternic’

Sedo Comes Through, Afternic Out To Lunch

March 6th, 2011

The old adage “There’s only one chance to make a good first impression” can certainly apply to domain name brokerages. Customer service is apparently a low priority for some brokerages, namely Afternic. Not good.

I recently sold a domain through Afternic that transferred into the buyer’s account over a week ago. Afternic is still waiting on the buyer’s “confirmation”. Of course, Afternic have already been informed that the domain is in the buyer’s possession, and a simple whois search shows this.

Sedo, on the other hand, has consistently performed well for me over the years. Consequently, I have both bought and sold domain names through Sedo’s brokerage, with complete satisfaction, including a few premium domains. And I have been very pleased with Sedo’s service in every transaction. As a matter of principle, I will not spend money with a company that fails to deliver acceptable customer service. So Sedo is in, and Afternic is out.

As a result of Afternic’s subpar response and assistance, there will be no purchases made by me through their brokerage. A first impression can open the door for future business. Blow that, and you lose customers. It’s a pretty simple concept: don’t aggravate your customers, or waste their time. Is that such a complicated lesson?

Buy Domains, Domain Brokerage , , ,

AfternicDLS Sells Ticket.com

October 8th, 2009
Comments Off

Ticket.comA great sale of a premium domain. Ticket.com has been purchased for $1,525,000 and had been promoted through the AfternicDLS distribution network. Details of the sale are scarce at this point and interested parties can only speculate as to the buyer.

The name is pure generic and consequently pulled a premium price. It is estimated to be in the top 5 published domain sales for 2009. One might naturally assume that the buyer is tickets.com, but there are a number of ticket sale companies operating successfully in this arena who could benefit from the Ticket.com domain.

Concerts, sports, and musical ticket sales bring in a staggering amount annually. So gaining any competitive edge in this space, even at the cost of $1,525,000, is likely a sound investment in capturing and protecting market share.

Internet Domains ,