So a hears that I buy domains and sends me an email with some of his domains for sell and my response:
Hi Cody,
I read somewhere that you also see the high value in GEO domains. I have a package for sale.
MaineTeeth.com
LasVegasStripTours.com
OklahomaUrology.com
TennesseeUrology.com
FloridaUrologist.com
IdahoUrology.com
MassachusettsUrology.com
I would transfer them to you via Escrow.com for $15,500. Should I send you the Escrow request?
Sincerely,
Domain Veggies
And my response:
Domain Veggies,
I spent $15K for immigrationcanada.com a couple months back. Because it was registered in 1999 and that keyword set has hundreds of thousands of searches each month. I also bought edmontondentist.com for around $3k because also registered in 1999 and it has around couple thousand related monthly searches.
For future reference you should focus on city names instead of state in my opinion. You should also know that your domains are not seasoned. You registered them a year ago.
I go looking for domains when I have a specific client need. I don't buy them for expensive prices to sit on the domain and hope that I can find a client after the fact.
Good luck and thanks for reaching out to me.
The most important lesson to learn here is that the age of the domain is EQUALLY/POSSIBLY MORE important as exact match status. And I suspect that as time passes it leans more towards age than exact match. When you see and exact match killing it in the search results you should also visit
Whois.com - Domain Names & Identity for Everyone and get the age of the domain FIRST before assuming Google dropped the ball on the EMD algo update.
The second lesson is if you didn't get into the domain buying and squatting game back in the 90s or early 2000's - you are wasting you time (hundreds of hours searching variations) and money paying $5 - $10 mo. while the dudes from the 90's are paying $1 or less for the really good ones already.
The 3rd lesson that few consider are the possible improvements to clickthrough and conversion with the domain naming convention. Some exact match sound and look well, clunky as f&^k. Others EMD's make you look like the dude WAY ahead of the curve. Like the dude that was IN BUSINESS and WINNING ONLINE for a long time. An early adopter. Someone with more time mastering a skill set, regardless of that skillset.
I'm not just considering exact match. I'm considering keyword volumes as well as LSI subcategories below that keyword that can benefit. For example: I hate a general dentist to use city+cosmeticdentist.com even if cosmetic is one of the categories of services that he sells. I want a cosmetic shop to use that domain.
I'm considering if I were the target buyer, how would that domain affect my opinion of the business with it. If I am having some penis issues ; ) and in need of a Urologist and I live in Nashville. I'm looking for a Urologist in Nashville not somewhere in Tennessee. And that holds true for most people in most cities.