What makes a $50 site? $100? $300? $750? .....

Discussion in 'Reviews' started by jimsmith, Sep 18, 2006.

  1. #1
    I am thinking about unloading some of my sites I don't have time for:
    i was wondering if you guys could give me a ballpark idea for pricing.
    how do you price a site, short of revenue stats, since they don't mean much anyway....

    need proof: (npr.org doesn't display ads and wouldn't have any revenue stats, but we'd all kill to get our hands on a site like that)

    what constitutes a:
    $50 site?
    $100
    $300
    $750

    thanks guys!
     
    jimsmith, Sep 18, 2006 IP
  2. eddy2099

    eddy2099 Peon

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    #2
    I don't think there is a real way of valuing a site accurately. It is more a willing buyer-willing seller pricing.

    I guess some parameters maybe traffic, repeat audience, unique content, length of domain name, age of the site and whether the site tickle the fancy of the potential buyer.

    Without revenue, turnkey sites usually falls lower in the pricing scale because they are basically turnkey and not unique.

    For me, I guess I would look at how much I spend on the site both financially and in terms of my time and use that to price the site.

    It is pretty hard to say really.
     
    eddy2099, Sep 18, 2006 IP
  3. jimsmith

    jimsmith Peon

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    #3
    wow,
    somebody really buried this thread on me.....
    digitalpoint/reviews hahaha
    well, whatever, anyone offer some more info on this thread? if you can find it.
     
    jimsmith, Sep 19, 2006 IP
  4. DarrenC

    DarrenC Peon

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    #4
    Yep, its not exactly a review but anyway, to answer your questions, I bought a new site (the one in my sig) and I bought it because of the PR, and that it looks to be out of the Google Sandbox - it was not getting any traffic, or revenue, but it has potential.
     
    DarrenC, Sep 19, 2006 IP