There is no cost for setting a reserve if the domain is with Netfleet, so the default view will just get cluttered up with domains with huge reserves. Nice way to get a domain appraised, not a very good way to produce a result.
Yes I can see how that could be a "potential" problem, but I think your fear of "cluttering" the auction is overblown and I personally think it is stifling NetFleet's chances of closing extra AMA deals everyday.
The way I see it is there is loads of upside for NetFleet (more deals everyday) and potentially lots of upside for buyers as well (ie the ability to potentially buy better quality domains) and at the same time there are a number of simple things you could do to avoid "cluttering" the auction.
The simplest would just be to
limit the number of domains someone can put up for auction on any given day, maybe to something like 10 (maybe to start off with have it as little as 2 or 3 just to see how it goes).
And you could make it so people could still add an unlimited number of no reserve domains to auction.
That said, I wouldn't be really worried, because the real question is
how many domainers are out there that would be actually willing to list the maximum 10 domains for sale everyday? 10? 20? 50? 100?
And let's not forget there is
nothing stopping us all from adding our domains to the AMA today with outrageous reserves for free to the be "valued", and I've never seen the AMA with "appraisal hunters".
Sure some MIGHT, but MOST won't.
And let's not forget that according to AusRegistry there are ONLY 44 portfolio holders in all of Australia that have 1000+ domains!
That's only 44 sellers that could "potentially clutter" your auction for longer than a couple of months...
And if you have a limit on the number of domains that can be listed how much "cluttering" can such a small bunch of domainers really do?
Truth be told I'd be impressed by your marketing abilities if you could get 25% of them to list domains on a regular basis!
Plus
to "clutter" the auction, a domain must first receive a bid and rise to the top otherwise it will be lost in the long list of other domains that don't have bids and will be no hindrance to anyone.
Now I'm sure you can review your own AMA data to confirm that at least 90% of all AMA domains don't receive the minimum bid (I wouldn't find it at all surprising if you told me only 3% of AMA domains get bids).
So let's say in the WORST case scenario, 100 domainers turn up on a given day (if that many even exist), putting 10 domains up for sale with outrageous reserves just looking for them to be "valued", when only 10% of them get bids, that still only means that there are 100 AMA domains with bids on the day...
There have been tons of times where over 100 domains have been bought on Snapper. So even in the WORST case scenario the auction would be anything out of the normal.
I don't know about most people on these forums, but I'm pretty pragmatic about my domains, they are just another asset to me, I have no love attachment too them, and I don't own them to "boast" about their "values" at dinner parties so
if I'm putting them on the AMA I genuinely want to sell them and genuinely hope they reach reserve.
When they pass in I consider it a "waste of my time" which is precious to me and I suspect those with domains worth selling will generally see it the same way. So I wouldn't be
underestimating domainers sincere desire to sell.
That's also why I've suggested previously to have a "push to market" button for domains on the AMA (which other serious domainers have supported), precisely because often domains I've listed on the AMA have got "decent" bids that are close enough to my reserve that at that point I just wanted to remove the reserve to get the deal done.
So I think you'd be surprised by the number of domainers that would be willing to remove their reserves mid auction if they received decent bids on their domains, but of course to give yourself the best chance to get those decent bids you need the domains to be front and centre of the auction.
Another benefit I have also suggested previously, why not have the reserve price automatically sent to the winner of the auctions that pass in to give them the option to "buy it now" at reserve. Who knows how many deals might get over the line if that happened, and it gives sellers the incentive to keep reserves priced realistically.
And let's not forget in many other industries
auctions passing in isn't the end of the world.
I went to the car auctions a couple of months ago and their clearance rate would have been less than 20%. Home auctions are REGULARLY below 50%.
It's really not the end of the world if domains pass in.
And there will always be people who MUST sell for various reasons and will price their domains accordingly. So it's not like the sales will dry up if you allow people to have reserves on their domains AND get exposure on the front page of the auction.
And I don't know what everyone else thinks but for the last month or so there has barely been a day were more than 20 or 30 "expiring" domains have sold. It's like
the expiring domains part of NetFleet isn't that exciting anymore...
Even when there are days where I'm not interested in anything I can't help but feel that it's the AMA domains more often than the Snapper domains that make me want to rock up at 1pm to see what happens, yet they are hidden away most of the time.
And on top of all that, who knows,
if listing your domain on the AMA (even with a reserve) was going to get your some serious exposure then maybe we'd see some serious domains go up for auction like:
Watches.com.au
Computers.com.au
DigitalCameras.com.au
Accommodation.com.au
MobilePhones.com.au
WebsiteDesign.com.au
Which are currently just sitting in the standard catalogue of NetFleet.
Do you really think if a domain like watches.com.au went to auction and fetched $100,000+ and still passed that it wouldn't still create a huge amount of buzz for both NetFleet and the industry?
Imagine if domains like that went to auction every month!
And who is to say that having a domain like that wouldn't bring some real serious bidders out of the woodwork...
Look, I totally understand why you guys might be fearful of really opening up the platform to domainers, and some of those fears might be justified to a degree, but at the same time I just keep thinking back to how regulated the AMA was when it was first launched and ever since then you guys have slowly but surely relaxed the restrictions, first removing the listing fees, then removing the cost for reserves, then letting the ones that have met reserve be listed with Snapper domains etc and
I think every step you've taken to incentivise domainers listing their domains on the AMA has been a huge success for NetFleet, domainers and the industry.
Yet I know that with each of those those decisions you guys were also fearful about the consequences as well... but everything turned out better than ever.
And let's not forget, you can always go back to the current method, but you guys will kick yourself everyday for all the time you've wasted if you try it and it turns out to be a huge success, and you will never be able to get that time back...