NameJet.com Starts 1st Public .Co Domain Auction

2010 July 27
by Michael H. Berkens

Namejet.com just announced the  “”First Aftermarket names available for Public Auction”

“These auctions are going on right now and since they are Public anyone can bid, but hurry they are scheduled to close on Friday July 30th.”

The list follows, here is the direct link to the domains.

Bidding starts at $69.

Interestingly all of these domains seems to be owned by one person,  so they are not registry owned domains or domains picked up by NameJet or Enom.

Matter of fact none of the domains seem to be registered at Enom but rather Godaddy.com

airlinejobs.co
funnypoems.co
obits.co
ancientgreece.co
ghoststories.co
obituraries.co
babyboynames.co
graduationsayings.co
orientbeach.co
currencyconversion.co
hippies.co
playarcadegames.co
cutebabynames.co
hostal.co
polarbears.co
deathnotice.co
humping.co
shorthairstyles.co
dreamdictionary.co
instructor.co
showering.co
emailaccounts.co
internetsearch.co
sunsets.co
endangeredspecies.co
internetsearchengines.co
tattoogallery.co
exoticlingerie.co
localnewspaper.co
tila.co
foodpyramid.co
lovetests.co
tornados.co
freeenglishcourse.co
metricconversion.co
uniquebabynames.co
freepoems.co
microbikini.co
wbr.co
freeradiostations.co
miniskirts.co
weddingvows.co
freesearch.co
nena.co
zodiacsigns.co

22 Responses leave one →
  1. 2010 July 27
    James permalink

    Poor quality – with the exception of 2 or 3 names, they don’t suit .co at all. Don’t think this auction is going to do anyone any good.

  2. 2010 July 27
    Tim permalink

    Huh? Scratch my head! :

    Humping.co

    PolarBears.co

    What the heck can anyone do with those? Where’s the transactions of prodserv?

    Talk about a silly waste of time.

  3. 2010 July 27

    Hey Mike,

    Is this really the “first”? Do the ongoing listings at Go Daddy and Sedo not count, or is this a different type of auction?

    Kevin

  4. 2010 July 27
    NotSocialist permalink

    Junk

  5. 2010 July 27

    45 domains x $30 each = $1,350 wasted dollars

  6. 2010 July 27
    Em John permalink

    Just got finished in a couple private .co auctions at Namejet. These names went pretty darn high for the amount of bidders.

    This list may have 5 or 6 good ones. But most don`t have enough monthly searches to warrant paying big bucks.

    miniskirts.co
    zodiacsigns.co
    localnewspaper.co
    tattoogallery.co
    internetsearch.co
    freesearch.co
    wbr.co
    emailaccounts.co

    If these are at auction, they may get
    $200-$400. Most of the others will get the $69 min. and quite a few no bids.

  7. 2010 July 27
    tim davids permalink

    obits and obituaries are good believe it or not. I own LocalObituaries.com and found there are some nice directions you can go with an obits site.

  8. 2010 July 27

    I am onboard with NotSocialist, DEMike77:
    Wasted Dollars & Junk are fine but I prefer – Denial, Gullible AND Impressionable

  9. 2010 July 28

    Totally BS domains…good for nothing.

    Domaining 101:
    Stick to dot com.

  10. 2010 July 28

    .co is becoming anti-news. 15 minutes are close to over.

  11. 2010 July 28
    Jocuri permalink

    Why the hurry sale later ?

  12. 2010 July 28
    Em John permalink

    MHB,

    Just a thought but maybe it would be a good idea to have two blog columns for comments. One for constructive thought, the other for trash-talking, rambling, idle speculation and so forth…LOL

  13. 2010 July 28
    Christopher permalink

    Haters, please…

    You are only showing the strength of your ignorance. BullS, you might want to look at some .ca or .de sale prices before you say .com is the only game in town. M. Menius, how can you say .co’s 15 minutes are up…it’s barely been out for 5 seconds and it has 340k regs. Everyone knows this one is different than the other tld’s so you should stop pretending you can predict it’s relegation to the heap of discarded tld’s. These particular domains on NameJet are mostly a lot of rubbish save for miniskirts.co but that has no bearing on the extension itself. I am not a domainer but I saw an opportunity here with .co. I think not being a domainer actually gives me the advantage of looking at this without the jaded cynicism of a grizzled domainer. I may be wrong, I can accept.

  14. 2010 July 28
    Domo Sapiens permalink

    I would love to hear the opinion of somebody from Madison Ave “hands on ” or with experience ( urls campaigns and Old media outside .com ) …
    I personally have to think gard before saying DOT CO (the M is nearly impossilbe to restrain)
    Imagine somebody verbatim referring somebody else to a Dot CO site…
    eg: go and check out cars.co ….where does that person will end?

  15. 2010 July 28

    It will take a little bit of time for .CO to become common place (if it ever does).
    I personally do not find it hard to say .CO at the end of a domain name.
    I still say that domainers will not be the ones that will accept or reject this domain.
    It will be the Businesses. If they latch onto .CO and use it, then it will become common place in the average persons vernacular.
    If the people running .CO really want to see this domain go forward, they would get large companies to utilize their domain extension. They have a good jump with O.co, T.co, and a few others.
    Now that they are a week old, its time for them to step up the game.

    **Still waiting for the 2,000 +/- domains that where held back from the landrush and general registration to go to auction. I would like to see what they will fetch on the open market.

  16. 2010 July 28
    Ron Wells permalink

    “If the people running .CO really want to see this domain go forward, they would get large companies to utilize their domain extension. They have a good jump with O.co, T.co, and a few others.”

    So far, Experian.com is using the name Credit-Report.co to redirect traffic to their website.

  17. 2010 July 29
    Em John permalink

    Christopher,

    So right. Sometimes when a person is so involved in something, it’s hard to see the forest through the trees. I agree that you probably have an insight being a “non-domainer”. It’s nice to have insights from people who are distanced.

    I guess I was wrong in thinking only 5 or 6 in the namejet auction would go. Out of the 45 domains, only 13 don’t have bids and almost half have multiple bids…go figure! Instructor.co has 12 bids.

  18. 2010 July 30

    I got cardiologist.co, simply couldn’t walk away although did reserve six had one come through. Curious to see what this might do in the future, to be quite honest, I might just keep this and make it into an ecommerce store. Thoughts on value anyone?

    Hemant

  19. 2010 July 31
    Em John permalink

    This auction went over pretty well. Instructor.co was really nice. Now there is another auction at namejet for 100 single word .co’s ending August 6th.

    Since General Registraion kickoff, there has been a steadily rising number of .co’s being registered everyday. It looks that it’s around 15000 a day right now and climbing fast. A lot of people are registering .co’s because finally they can get the name they want, at a reasonable price, with a nice little extension.

    Did everyone check out jco.co? That’s a pretty cool site.

  20. 2010 July 31

    Per EM John-

    A lot of people are registering .co’s because finally they can get the name they want, at a reasonable price, with a nice little extension.

    What happens when a 3rd person wants a domain and the “.co” and “.com” are already taken – are they getting the domain they want ?

  21. 2010 July 31
    MHB permalink

    Here are some sales from this auction:

    tornados.co $139
    sunsets.co $219
    obituraries.co $130
    nena.co $159
    miniskirts.co $219
    instructor.co $461
    emailaccounts.co $289

    These are the ones I just followed not an all inclusive result

  22. 2011 September 26

    I like the .co domain but I think is going to take a long time until it becomes profitable. People should wait because it could be a few years until they can make money.

Leave a Reply

Note: You can use basic XHTML in your comments. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to this comment feed via RSS

Please copy the string q1st7f to the field below: