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Ask HN: Best way to word contact with owner of domain you want

4 pointsby zacharytamasalmost 13 years ago
Hi guys, I was wondering how you would recommend contacting the owner of a domain you are interested in. Brief summary: there's a startup idea I'm playing with and I came up with what I think is a great, clever name. I was sitting in a Starbucks brainstorming when it hit me and I immediately pulled out my iPhone and tried to visit the site. It wouldn't load—good sign! Unfortunately later I did a WHOIS and discovered the domain is actually owned by a man from India who doesn't seem to be using it for anything—it doesn't even have A records pointing at a server.<p>As such, I am considering contacting this man to express interest in his domain but as I'm bootstrapping this venture I can't afford to be gouged too badly on a domain name. I know the "if the name is THE name for your product, spare no expense" mantra but realistically I can't afford to pay $10,000 for a domain name just because they know I want it badly.<p>So, my question is this: how would you recommend approaching the situation in an email to the owner in a way that is respectable but also portrays professionalism in hopes for a reasonable business discussion?

5 comments

Tophalmost 13 years ago
1. Don't overthink it or assume any dollar amount. You're only causing your own problems/stress.<p>2. Try to get an email (maybe off WHOIS) and email the guy to see if he is even interested in selling.<p>3. Go from there.
runjakealmost 13 years ago
I have a domain that I registered well over a decade ago. It's a simple, single english word and an extension. I don't even reply to the ones that don't give me a price up front.<p>The ones that have given me a price haven't been in the ballpark to make it worth my while, but at least they get a reply (aka communication channel).
canatan01almost 13 years ago
Even if the name hasn't got an A record, it might still be listed by the owner in Sedo. So take a look there if it is listed.<p>Otherwise go for what Toph is suggesting in his reply.
larrysalmost 13 years ago
It's really hard to answer this question generally. The approach depends totally on the name and what you are willing to spend and if you have a plan b etc.<p>"owned by a man from India "<p>Generally speaking that's actually a good sign from my experience.
bmeltonalmost 13 years ago
I don't have any particular advice for the question asked, but as an aside, checking the domain first is the worst thing to do.<p>Domain squatting is such a big deal that squatters purchase unresolved domain reports from ISPs, meaning that your phone's carrier is likely selling a list of all the domains that aren't registered that people are searching for. If you hesitate at all on acquisition, the domain might get scooped out from under you.<p>I buy impulse domains all the time, and recommend that you get a whois app for your phone. Also, check to ensure that the whois provider doesn't sell their vacant search list as well. I know that whois.sc doesn't, so I pretty much use them for everything, but I don't have my phone at hand to see what app I use there.<p>Lastly, when registering, many of the registrars do the same thing. Name.com doesn't, GoDaddy does, but those are about the only ones I can speak for off-handedly.
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