Just my personal opinion Jason, but for something as local as this, I think a .com is not the right extension. Therefore I'd put its value as minimal.
I'd be looking to acquire com.au's - plus something with better search volume.
I own quite a few "Byron Bay" names, and some of them have nearly 3000 Exacts a month as opposed to this one which only has 320.
As I said, imho.
I beg to differ regarding the wrong extension. Firstly because other .com's are at the top of the serps and because almost a quarter of visitors are from overseas.
I think it's ok. Firstly because other .com's are at the top of the serps and because almost a quarter of visitors are from overseas.
So what is the market, the 70 people a month from overseas who search for the term?
Even the nz people are going to expect .com.au in my view, just like Australian's would expect .co.nz for New Zealand sites.
Did you miss the point I made that a .com is number 1 for "byron bay" in google.com.au?
It's not a weak domain for a Byron Bay holiday house.
Consumers who use google don't care if the top of the serps are .com's or .com.au's. They click on the ones at the top.
I think you are looking at it from a domainer point of view not as a developer.
It would be very easy to get that into the top 3 for the exact phrase and whilst the traffic is not high it doesn't need to be when these properties can rent for $4k per week in the low season.
If you get 70 visitors per month that fantastic because there's only 4 weeks in the month (ie very limited stock).
Can people remember a hyphen and .com when they try to remember the site?
If search engine ranking is all that matters why not just use a .co, or a .net.au or any old extension, maybe even a .com with a couple of hyphens?
70 visitors a month would make for an unviable business in my view.
They get about 1.25 million visitors per annum, I don't think that's an issue.
And in a time when lots of people type google into the google search bar to get to google.com.au, typing byron bay into the search bar to get to byron-bay com is no stretch.
Why not it seems to work for credit cards [credit - cards net au at no 1]. Getting this .com ranked would be pretty easy.
When you're renting the beach house out for $4k per week spending a one off $1k on a domain, a site and some seo to get 70 visitors to your site each month, is clearly a good idea. In isolation in might not be enough to forgo the Stayz and adwords legs of the business. However the payback period could easily be with the first booking it makes, so by any business interpretation, it's a good investment.
The point isn't whether someone can run a successful business on a hyphenated .com for the Australian market, the issue is whether it is a good choice.
What happens when the site is #2 in google down the track.....or #5, is relying on search engines a good way for a to get repeat business?
Where is the value of the domain if it is just about getting ranked on a search engine?
If .whatever for reg fee is a good as .com.au why would people spend any money on .com.au's?
There isn't 70 people going to the no.1 ranked site a month, there is 70 searches on google for the term.
If you just had one beach house though the conversion rate is going to be terrible (because most people will have a different budget to where your house is priced at - higher or lower), so it wouldn't be likely to be worth $1.25 to that person.
I think you are overstating the profitability of things. The average beach houses loses money for owners, it is not rented most of the time then there is all the costs of a mortgage, maintaining, updating, council rates, utilities etc. The rent really just helps with the upkeep on it. Different situation for the agents who can build a real business around holiday homes.
I've given you two excellent examples of where it was a good choice. As a domainer you're getting hung up on a domain needing to be flawless when clearly they don't.
Probably having an outstanding product and good follow up marketing is the way to get repeat business.
No there's 390 a month global and 320 local.
In my experience, 20-25% of exact monthly searches is around what you could expect for being at number 1 for keywords like that.
I think it's ok. Firstly because other .com's are at the top of the serps and because almost a quarter of visitors are from overseas.
If you got 1 lead out of 70 visitors and they booked for a week ($4k) would that be a success given they haven't had to pay 10% commission or worse to an agent?
You'd have to be pretty optimistic to get a cheap holiday house at Byron
I think you don't understand the market or Byron Bay. It's not your typical east coast holiday spot, it's a full on freak show with it's own daily traffic jams.
It is a bit like me arguing driving a mercedes makes you rich, "Look at all those successful people who own mercedes".
Having a domain that isn't logical or easy to remember is not a good thing.
You were arguing the domain is worthwhile for the international component, that is 70 searches.
This isn't realistic maths. Firstly I can't imagine having 1 house listed in going to give result in a conversion rate over 1%. If one out of 70 converted then the traffic would be worth far more than $1.35 to the estate agents with large numbers of listings who can convert it efficiently.
Secondly agents fees are typically 20-30% on holiday homes, sometimes 40% in some areas.
$4000 a week may sound like a lot, but when the house costs couple of million plus a boat load of money each year to maintain it isn't going to be much of a dent unless it is really rented a lot, which most places aren't.
If you got 1 lead out of 70 visitors and they booked for a week ($4k) would that be a success given they haven't had to pay 10% commission or worse to an agent?