I saw this press release that was published today for the word Gamely.com which appears to be for sale and the subject of the press release.
Not a horrible domain, but certain a very bad pitch in my opinion when it comes to price:
“We are talking about the domain name Gamely.com. We asked the domain name expert Paul Wilson what figure he sees on this domain name and this is what he said: “I think that I can convince the owners to sell for US $500,000.”
Paul Wilson appears to be the agent for the domain name.
Why put out a press release stating that you think you can get the owners to sell for $500,000?
Doesn’t make much sense to me.
Here is the rest of the press release:
The financial rewards and the prestige are important.
These days, there are not too many occasions to be the leader and own a domain name that no one else can have.
Many will be jealous when they see that it is a short one word that is in the dictionary and is easy to spell and remember.
Of course it has the best extension a dot-com and it is nice and friendly, and also sounds good.
When considering a domain name a great return on investment is needed, and it should pay for itself in no time.
Naturally, it will make others want to have it, and they will envy the owner because of his/her own passionate vision.
One can follow his/her dreams and acquire this unique and rare domain name that is a most efficient marketing tool.
We are talking about the domain name Gamely.com.
We asked the domain name expert Paul Wilson what figure he sees on this domain name and this is what he said: “I think that I can convince the owners to sell for US $500,000.”
Sounds very amateur to me.
I contacted them several times these past years to buy their catchy domain gamy.com, but not for $500K.
US$ 500,000.00, really? Game.ly dropped last year, for a reason.
The author has struggled gamely to put on a Superbowl inside a soup bowl. We should admire his ambition!