The domain I would like to use for my startup redirects to a page on afternic.com and displays a page with a GoDaddy logo. Plus a form to request a price for the domain. I wonder if it is a good idea to fill out that form?
When I search for the domain on afternic.com they display a "buy now" price of $40k which seems very high to me. And there is a "make an offer" button with "$25k min." next to it. Also very high.
There certainly are HN users with experience in buying domains. How would you go about it?
So, yes, those forms work, you can try it once.
Anecdotally I don't think a snappy domain has much effect on SEO or a company's market value. Most users will access your website through search engines or links, and reasonable investors care about product-market fit, moat, strategy, and all those other things which have tangible effects on the success of a business.
1. Do a Sedo.com search and see if it is listed there.
2. Search on Godaddy.com and Name.com and see if the domain is offered for a lower price.
3. If 1 and 2 didn't yield any results, monitor the domain using the many services available. If it drops, you will get notified. Expensive domains do get dropped once in a while, due to various reasons.
4. As throwaway158497 suggested below, offer a much lower price, if you can withstand the potential consequences.
>How would you go about it?
Think of a clever short .com and hand register it for less than $20. Or, if there is a second choice domain available for a lower price, buy that. Keep the rest of the money with you.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1198541
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5642503
Maybe some of the discussions from back then can be of help? Would love to hear others chime in as well.
I sometimes get a message from somebody who offers me $75 for a domain.
Most people who've sat on domain for a while think $75k is more like it but they won't get it.
Fill out the form if you like but I think the odds are poor you'll get a response.